4.1 Article

Design of the trial of activity in adolescent girls (TAAG)

Journal

CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL TRIALS
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 223-233

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2004.12.011

Keywords

accelerometry; cross-sectional design; intervention; middle school; group-randomized trial; physical activity

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [U01 HL066853-01, U01 HL066853] Funding Source: Medline

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The primary aim of the Trial of Activity in Adolescent Girls (TAAG) is to test an intervention to reduce by half the age-related decline in moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) in middle school girls. The intervention will be evaluated using a group-randomized trial involving 36 middle schools. The primary endpoint is the mean difference in intensity-weighted minutes (i.e., MET-minutes) of MVPA between intervention and comparison schools assessed using accelerometry. The TAAG study design calls for two cross-sectional samples, one drawn from 6th graders at the beginning of the study and the second drawn from 8th graders at the end of the study following the 2-year implementation of the intervention. An important strength of this design over a cohort design is the consistency with the goals of TAAG, which focus on environmental-level rather than individual-level interventions to produce change. The study design specifies a recruitment rate of 80% and a smaller sample of girls at baseline (n = 48 per school) than at follow-up (n = 96 per school). A two-stage model will be used to test the primary hypothesis. In the first stage, MET-weighted minutes of MVPA will be regressed on school, time (baseline or follow-up), their interaction, ethnicity and week of data collection. The second stage analysis will be conducted on the 72 adjusted means from the first stage. In the main-effects model, we will regress the follow-up school mean MET-weighted minutes of MVPA on study condition, adjusting for the baseline school mean. The TAAG study addresses an important health behavior, and also advances the field of group-randomized trials through the use of a study design and analysis plan tailored to serve the main study hypothesis. © 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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