TY - JOUR
T1 - Split-mouth designs in orthodontics: An overview with applications to orthodontic clinical trials
AU - Pandis, Nikolaos
AU - Walsh, Tanya
AU - Polychronopoulou, Argy
AU - Katsaros, Christos
AU - Eliades, Theodore
PY - 2013/12
Y1 - 2013/12
N2 - Split-mouth designs first appeared in dental clinical trials in the late sixties. The main advantage of this study design is its efficiency in terms of sample size as the patients act as their own controls. Cited disadvantages relate to carry-across effects, contamination or spilling of the effects of one intervention to another, period effects if the interventions are delivered at different time periods, difficulty in finding similar comparison sites within patients and the requirement for more complex data analysis. Although some additional thought is required when utilizing a split-mouth design, the efficiency of this design is attractive, particularly in orthodontic clinical studies where carry-across, period effects and dissimilarity between intervention sites does not pose a problem. Selection of the appropriate research design, intervention protocol and statistical method accounting for both the reduced variability and potential clustering effects within patients should be considered for the trial results to be valid. © 2013 The Author.
AB - Split-mouth designs first appeared in dental clinical trials in the late sixties. The main advantage of this study design is its efficiency in terms of sample size as the patients act as their own controls. Cited disadvantages relate to carry-across effects, contamination or spilling of the effects of one intervention to another, period effects if the interventions are delivered at different time periods, difficulty in finding similar comparison sites within patients and the requirement for more complex data analysis. Although some additional thought is required when utilizing a split-mouth design, the efficiency of this design is attractive, particularly in orthodontic clinical studies where carry-across, period effects and dissimilarity between intervention sites does not pose a problem. Selection of the appropriate research design, intervention protocol and statistical method accounting for both the reduced variability and potential clustering effects within patients should be considered for the trial results to be valid. © 2013 The Author.
U2 - 10.1093/ejo/cjs108
DO - 10.1093/ejo/cjs108
M3 - Article
C2 - 23376899
SN - 0141-5387
VL - 35
SP - 783
EP - 789
JO - European Journal of Orthodontics
JF - European Journal of Orthodontics
IS - 6
ER -