Intended for healthcare professionals

Research Article

Analysis of serial measurements in medical research.

British Medical Journal 1990; 300 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.300.6719.230 (Published 27 January 1990) Cite this as: British Medical Journal 1990;300:230
  1. J N Matthews,
  2. D G Altman,
  3. M J Campbell,
  4. P Royston
  1. Division of Medical Statistics, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, The Medical School.

    Abstract

    In medical research data are often collected serially on subjects. The statistical analysis of such data is often inadequate in two ways: it may fail to settle clinically relevant questions and it may be statistically invalid. A commonly used method which compares groups at a series of time points, possibly with t tests, is flawed on both counts. There may, however, be a remedy, which takes the form of a two stage method that uses summary measures. In the first stage a suitable summary of the response in an individual, such as a rate of change or an area under a curve, is identified and calculated for each subject. In the second stage these summary measures are analysed by simple statistical techniques as though they were raw data. The method is statistically valid and likely to be more relevant to the study questions. If this method is borne in mind when the experiment is being planned it should promote studies with enough subjects and sufficient observations at critical times to enable useful conclusions to be drawn. Use of summary measures to analyse serial measurements, though not new, is potentially a useful and simple tool in medical research.