Prevalence and implications of significance testing for baseline covariate imbalance in randomised cancer clinical trials: The Table 1 Fallacy Journal Article


Authors: Sherry, A. D.; Msaouel, P.; McCaw, Z. R.; Abi Jaoude, J.; Hsu, E. J.; Kouzy, R.; Patel, R.; Yang, Y.; Lin, T. A.; Taniguchi, C. M.; Rödel, C.; Fokas, E.; Tang, C.; Fuller, C. D.; Minsky, B.; Meirson, T.; Sun, R.; Ludmir, E. B.
Article Title: Prevalence and implications of significance testing for baseline covariate imbalance in randomised cancer clinical trials: The Table 1 Fallacy
Abstract: Background: The ‘Table 1 Fallacy’ refers to the unsound use of significance testing for comparing the distributions of baseline variables between randomised groups to draw erroneous conclusions about balance or imbalance. We performed a cross-sectional study of the Table 1 Fallacy in phase III oncology trials. Methods: From ClinicalTrials.gov, 1877 randomised trials were screened. Multivariable logistic regressions evaluated predictors of the Table 1 Fallacy. Results: A total of 765 randomised controlled trials involving 553,405 patients were analysed. The Table 1 Fallacy was observed in 25% of trials (188 of 765), with 3% of comparisons deemed significant (59 of 2353), approximating the typical 5% type I error assertion probability. Application of trial-level multiplicity corrections reduced the rate of significant findings to 0.3% (six of 2345 tests). Factors associated with lower odds of the Table 1 Fallacy included industry sponsorship (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.29, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.18–0.47; multiplicity-corrected P < 0.0001), larger trial size (≥795 versus <280 patients; aOR 0.32, 95% CI 0.19–0.53; multiplicity-corrected P = 0.0008), and publication in a European versus American journal (aOR 0.06, 95% CI 0.03–0.13; multiplicity-corrected P < 0.0001). Conclusions: This study highlights the persistence of the Table 1 Fallacy in contemporary oncology randomised controlled trials, with one of every four trials testing for baseline differences after randomisation. Significance testing is a suboptimal method for identifying unsound randomisation procedures and may encourage misleading inferences. Journal-level enforcement is a possible strategy to help mitigate this fallacy. © 2023 The Authors
Keywords: oncology; phase iii; randomised controlled trials; covariate imbalance; significance testing for baseline characteristics; table 1 fallacy; testing for baseline differences
Journal Title: European Journal of Cancer
Volume: 194
ISSN: 0959-8049
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2023-11-01
Start Page: 113357
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2023.113357
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 37827064
PMCID: PMC11512581
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Roshal Patel
    12 Patel