Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial

Abstract Background A recent trial identified large variation in effect of chiropractic care for infantile colic. Thus, identification of possible effect modifiers could potentially enhance the clinical reasoning to select infants with excessive crying for chiropractic care. Therefore, the aim of th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lise Vilstrup Holm, Werner Vach, Dorte Ejg Jarbøl, Henrik Wulff Christensen, Jens Søndergaard, Lise Hestbæk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-021-00373-6
id doaj-fa300bfff3c844ada188142bcbcd8ca7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fa300bfff3c844ada188142bcbcd8ca72021-04-25T11:50:27ZengBMCChiropractic & Manual Therapies2045-709X2021-04-0129111310.1186/s12998-021-00373-6Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trialLise Vilstrup Holm0Werner Vach1Dorte Ejg Jarbøl2Henrik Wulff Christensen3Jens Søndergaard4Lise Hestbæk5Nordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkNordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkResearch Unit of General Practice in Odense, Department of Public Health, University of Southern DenmarkNordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkResearch Unit of General Practice in Odense, Department of Public Health, University of Southern DenmarkNordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkAbstract Background A recent trial identified large variation in effect of chiropractic care for infantile colic. Thus, identification of possible effect modifiers could potentially enhance the clinical reasoning to select infants with excessive crying for chiropractic care. Therefore, the aim of this study is to identify potential treatment effect modifiers which might influence the effect of chiropractic care for excessive crying in infancy. Methods Design: Prespecified secondary analyses of data from a randomised controlled trial. The analyses are partly confirmative and partly exploratory. Setting: Four chiropractic clinics in Denmark. Participants: Infants aged 2–14 weeks with unexplained excessive crying. Of the 200 infants randomised (1:1), 103 were assigned to a chiropractic care group and 97 to a control group. Intervention: Infants in the intervention group received chiropractic care for 2 weeks, while the control group was not treated. Main analyses: The outcome was change in daily hours of crying. Fifteen baseline variables and 6 general variables were selected as potential effect modifiers, and indices based on these were constructed. Factor analyses, latent class analyses and prognosis were used to construct other potentially modifying variables. Finally, an attempt at defining a new index aiming at optimal prediction of the treatment effect was made. The predictive value for all resulting variables were examined by considering the difference in mean change in crying time between the two treatment groups, stratified by the values of the candidate variables, i.e. interaction analyses. Results None of the predefined items or indices were shown to be useful in identifying colicky infants with potentially larger gain from manual therapy. However, more baseline hours of crying (p = 0.029), short duration of symptoms (p = 0.061) and young age (p = 0.089) were all associated with an increased effect on the outcome of hours of crying. Conclusion Musculoskeletal indicators were not shown to be predictive of an increased benefit for colicky infants from chiropractic treatment. However, increased benefit was associated with early treatment and a high level of baseline crying, suggesting that the most severely affected infants have the greatest potential of benefiting from manual therapy. This finding requires validation by future studies. Trial registration Clinical Trials NCT02595515 , registered 2 November 2015.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-021-00373-6Infantile colicChiropracticRandomized controlled trialManipulative treatmentExcessive cryingEffect modification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lise Vilstrup Holm
Werner Vach
Dorte Ejg Jarbøl
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Jens Søndergaard
Lise Hestbæk
spellingShingle Lise Vilstrup Holm
Werner Vach
Dorte Ejg Jarbøl
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Jens Søndergaard
Lise Hestbæk
Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Infantile colic
Chiropractic
Randomized controlled trial
Manipulative treatment
Excessive crying
Effect modification
author_facet Lise Vilstrup Holm
Werner Vach
Dorte Ejg Jarbøl
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Jens Søndergaard
Lise Hestbæk
author_sort Lise Vilstrup Holm
title Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial
title_short Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial
title_full Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial
title_fullStr Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial
title_sort identifying potential treatment effect modifiers of the effectiveness of chiropractic care to infants with colic through prespecified secondary analyses of a randomised controlled trial
publisher BMC
series Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
issn 2045-709X
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background A recent trial identified large variation in effect of chiropractic care for infantile colic. Thus, identification of possible effect modifiers could potentially enhance the clinical reasoning to select infants with excessive crying for chiropractic care. Therefore, the aim of this study is to identify potential treatment effect modifiers which might influence the effect of chiropractic care for excessive crying in infancy. Methods Design: Prespecified secondary analyses of data from a randomised controlled trial. The analyses are partly confirmative and partly exploratory. Setting: Four chiropractic clinics in Denmark. Participants: Infants aged 2–14 weeks with unexplained excessive crying. Of the 200 infants randomised (1:1), 103 were assigned to a chiropractic care group and 97 to a control group. Intervention: Infants in the intervention group received chiropractic care for 2 weeks, while the control group was not treated. Main analyses: The outcome was change in daily hours of crying. Fifteen baseline variables and 6 general variables were selected as potential effect modifiers, and indices based on these were constructed. Factor analyses, latent class analyses and prognosis were used to construct other potentially modifying variables. Finally, an attempt at defining a new index aiming at optimal prediction of the treatment effect was made. The predictive value for all resulting variables were examined by considering the difference in mean change in crying time between the two treatment groups, stratified by the values of the candidate variables, i.e. interaction analyses. Results None of the predefined items or indices were shown to be useful in identifying colicky infants with potentially larger gain from manual therapy. However, more baseline hours of crying (p = 0.029), short duration of symptoms (p = 0.061) and young age (p = 0.089) were all associated with an increased effect on the outcome of hours of crying. Conclusion Musculoskeletal indicators were not shown to be predictive of an increased benefit for colicky infants from chiropractic treatment. However, increased benefit was associated with early treatment and a high level of baseline crying, suggesting that the most severely affected infants have the greatest potential of benefiting from manual therapy. This finding requires validation by future studies. Trial registration Clinical Trials NCT02595515 , registered 2 November 2015.
topic Infantile colic
Chiropractic
Randomized controlled trial
Manipulative treatment
Excessive crying
Effect modification
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-021-00373-6
work_keys_str_mv AT lisevilstrupholm identifyingpotentialtreatmenteffectmodifiersoftheeffectivenessofchiropracticcaretoinfantswithcolicthroughprespecifiedsecondaryanalysesofarandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT wernervach identifyingpotentialtreatmenteffectmodifiersoftheeffectivenessofchiropracticcaretoinfantswithcolicthroughprespecifiedsecondaryanalysesofarandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT dorteejgjarbøl identifyingpotentialtreatmenteffectmodifiersoftheeffectivenessofchiropracticcaretoinfantswithcolicthroughprespecifiedsecondaryanalysesofarandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT henrikwulffchristensen identifyingpotentialtreatmenteffectmodifiersoftheeffectivenessofchiropracticcaretoinfantswithcolicthroughprespecifiedsecondaryanalysesofarandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT jenssøndergaard identifyingpotentialtreatmenteffectmodifiersoftheeffectivenessofchiropracticcaretoinfantswithcolicthroughprespecifiedsecondaryanalysesofarandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT lisehestbæk identifyingpotentialtreatmenteffectmodifiersoftheeffectivenessofchiropracticcaretoinfantswithcolicthroughprespecifiedsecondaryanalysesofarandomisedcontrolledtrial
_version_ 1721509416647262208