True and false interindividual differences in the physiological response to an intervention

被引:216
作者
Atkinson, Greg [1 ]
Batterham, Alan M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Teesside, Hlth & Social Care Inst, Sch Hlth & Social Care, Middlesbrough TS1 3BA, Tees Valley, England
关键词
BLOOD-PRESSURE; BASE-LINE; EXERCISE; REGRESSION; MEDICINE; VARIABILITY; STATISTICS; TIME;
D O I
10.1113/EP085070
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
New Findings What is the topic of this review? In personalized medicine', various plots and analyses are purported to quantify individual differences in intervention response, identify responders/non-responders and explore response moderators or mediators. What advances does it highlight? We highlight the impact of within-subject random variation, which is inevitable even with gold-standard' measurement tools/protocols and sometimes so substantial that it explains all apparent individual response differences. True individual response differences are quantified only by comparing the SDs of changes between intervention and comparator arms. When these SDs are similar, true individual response differences are clinically unimportant and further analysis unwarranted. Within the hot topic' of personalized medicine, we scrutinize common approaches for presenting and quantifying individual differences in the physiological response to an intervention. First, we explain how popular plots used to present individual differences in response are contaminated by random within-subject variation and the regression to the mean artefact. Using a simulated data set of blood pressure measurements, we show that large individual differences in physiological response can be suggested by some plots and analyses, even when the true magnitude of response is exactly the same in all individuals. Second, we present the appropriate designs and analysis approaches for quantifying the true interindividual variation in physiological response. It is imperative to include a comparator arm/condition (or derive information from a prior relevant repeatability study) to quantify true interindividual differences in response. The most important statistic is the SD of changes in the intervention arm, which should be compared with the same SD in the comparator arm or from a prior repeatability study in the same population conducted over the same duration as the particular intervention. Only if the difference between these SDs is clinically relevant is it logical to go on to explore any moderators or mediators of the intervention effect that might explain the individual response. To date, very few researchers have compared these SDs before making claims about individual differences in physiological response and their importance to personalized medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:577 / 588
页数:12
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], COCHRANE HDB SYSTEMA
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1999, Biostatistical Analysis
[3]   Is it time for sports performance researchers to adopt a clinical-type research framework? [J].
Atkinson, G. ;
Batterham, A. ;
Drust, B. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE, 2008, 29 (09) :703-705
[4]   Statistical methods for assessing measurement error (reliability) in variables relevant to sports medicine [J].
Atkinson, G ;
Nevill, AM .
SPORTS MEDICINE, 1998, 26 (04) :217-238
[5]   How to show that unicorn milk is a chronobiotic: The regression-to-the-mean statistical artifact [J].
Atkinson, G ;
Waterhouse, J ;
Reilly, T ;
Edwards, B .
CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2001, 18 (06) :1041-1053
[6]   Individual differences in the exercise-mediated blood pressure response: regression to the mean in disguise? [J].
Atkinson, Greg .
CLINICAL PHYSIOLOGY AND FUNCTIONAL IMAGING, 2015, 35 (06) :490-491
[7]   The percentage flow-mediated dilation index: A large-sample investigation of its appropriateness, potential for bias and causal nexus in vascular medicine [J].
Atkinson, Greg ;
Batterham, Alan M. .
VASCULAR MEDICINE, 2013, 18 (06) :354-365
[8]   Normalization effect of sports training on blood pressure in hypertensive individuals: Regression to the mean? [J].
Atkinson, Greg ;
Taylor, Chloe .
JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES, 2011, 29 (06) :643-644
[9]   Inter-individual variability in the improvement of physiological risk factors for disease: gene polymorphisms or simply regression to the mean? [J].
Atkinson, Greg ;
Taylor, Chloe E. ;
Jones, Helen .
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 2010, 588 (06) :1023-1024
[10]   How big does my sample need to be? A primer on the murky world of sample size estimation [J].
Batterham, AM ;
Atkinson, G .
PHYSICAL THERAPY IN SPORT, 2005, 6 (03) :153-163