Journal article

Applying the intention-to-treat principle in practice: Guidance on handling randomisation errors

LN Yelland, TR Sullivan, M Voysey, KJ Lee, JA Cook, AB Forbes

Clinical Trials | Published : 2015

Abstract

Background: The intention-to-treat principle states that all randomised participants should be analysed in their randomised group. The implications of this principle are widely discussed in relation to the analysis, but have received limited attention in the context of handling errors that occur during the randomisation process. The aims of this article are to (1) demonstrate the potential pitfalls of attempting to correct randomisation errors and (2) provide guidance on handling common randomisation errors when they are discovered that maintains the goals of the intention-to-treat principle. Methods: The potential pitfalls of attempting to correct randomisation errors are demonstrated and g..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by UK Research and Innovation


Funding Acknowledgements

Lisa Yelland and Katherine Lee were supported by Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Fellowships (Early Career Fellowship ID 1052388 for L.Y., Career Development Fellowship ID 1053609 for K.L.). Jonathan Cook was supported by a Medical Research Council UK Methodology Research Fellowship (ID G1002292).