%0 Journal Article %T Chronic pain treatment preferences change following participation in N-of-1 trials, but not always in the expected direction. %A Kravitz RL %A Marois M %A Sim I %A Ward D %A Kanekar SS %A Yu A %A Dounias P %A Yang J %A Wang Y %A Schmid CH %J J Clin Epidemiol %V 139 %N 0 %D Nov 2021 %M 34400254 %F 7.407 %R 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2021.08.007 %X OBJECTIVE: To examine pain treatment preferences before and after participation in an N-of-1 trial.
METHODS: In this observational study nested within a randomized trial, we examined chronic pain patients' preferences before and after treatment in relation to N-of-1 trial results; assessed the influence of different schemes for defining comparative "superiority" on potential conclusions; and generated classification trees illustrating the relationship between pre-treatment preferences, N-of-1 trial results, and post-treatment preferences.
RESULTS: Treatment preferences differed pre- and post-trial for 40% of participants. The proportion of patients whose N-of-1 trials demonstrated "superiority" of one treatment regimen over the other varied depending on how superiority was defined and ranged from 24% (using criteria that required statistically significant differences between regimens) to 62% (when relying only on differences in point estimates). Regardless of criteria for declaring treatment superiority, nearly three-fourths of patients with equivocal N-of-1 trial results nevertheless expressed definite preferences post-trial.
CONCLUSIONS: A large segment of patients undergoing N-of-1 trials for chronic pain altered their treatment preferences. However, the direction of preference change did not necessarily correspond to the N-of-1 results. More research is needed to understand how patients use N-of-1 trial results, why preferences are "sticky" even in the face of personalized data, and how patients and clinicians might be educated to use N-of-1 trial results more informatively.