A comparison of imputation strategies in cluster randomized trials with missing binary outcomes.

Agnès Caille; Clémence Leyrat ORCID logo; Bruno Giraudeau; (2014) A comparison of imputation strategies in cluster randomized trials with missing binary outcomes. Statistical methods in medical research, 25 (6). pp. 2650-2669. ISSN 0962-2802 DOI: 10.1177/0962280214530030
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In cluster randomized trials, clusters of subjects are randomized rather than subjects themselves, and missing outcomes are a concern as in individual randomized trials. We assessed strategies for handling missing data when analysing cluster randomized trials with a binary outcome; strategies included complete case, adjusted complete case, and simple and multiple imputation approaches. We performed a simulation study to assess bias and coverage rate of the population-averaged intervention-effect estimate. Both multiple imputation with a random-effects logistic regression model or classical logistic regression provided unbiased estimates of the intervention effect. Both strategies also showed good coverage properties, even slightly better for multiple imputation with a random-effects logistic regression approach. Finally, this latter approach led to a slightly negatively biased intracluster correlation coefficient estimate but less than that with a classical logistic regression model strategy. We applied these strategies to a real trial randomizing households and comparing ivermectin and malathion to treat head lice.

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