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Esther12. At first I was going to lightly disagree with you because of this ...
White et al said:
The domains chosen and the criteria for recovery on each were defined before we undertook the analysis. [...] We changed some of the thresholds for measuring recovery from those of the original protocols (White et al. 2007); we made the changes before analysis and to more accurately reflect recovery.
However, I found some notes I took on this issue from previous discussions.
We have this from the 2011 Lancet paper:
The statistical analysis plan was finalised, including changes to the original protocol, and was approved by the trial steering committee and the data monitoring and ethics committee before outcome data were examined.
I assumed that the 'post-hoc' analyses mentioned in the 2011 Lancet paper meant after the trial began but before seeing the actual data. However, the statistical analysis plan mentions nothing whatsoever about the most notorious 'post-hoc' analysis, i.e. normal range in fatigue and physical function. Furthermore, the revised definition of recovery, which is fundamentally based on this so-called normal range, is not mentioned either in the statistical analysis plan.
The recovery paper, which was published 2 years after the 2011 Lancet paper, stated that,
"we made the changes before analysis". This of course does not guarantee that they made the changes before working on previous papers involving the same PACE data which was being re-used in the recovery paper, it just means that they technically made the changes before conducting the statistical analysis for the recovery paper.
As an open-label trial the researchers could have gained obvious impressions that their favoured therapies were failing to meet expectations anyway. But you may indeed be right that they made some of the changes after seeing the data.
In the statistical analysis plan it states that:
"The aim of this paper is to make public and to report in detail the planned analyses that were approved by the Trial Steering Committee in May 2010..."
So, when did the Trial Steering Committee approve the 'normal range' in fatigue and physical function, then? Unlike the first PACE paper, the recovery paper does not mention the trial steering committee. So it is also possible that the steering committee was not involved with these later changes, which would then effectively be unapproved and unplanned.