Optimizing Complex Health Intervention Packages through the Learn-As-you-GO (LAGO) Design
Donna Spiegelman (Center on Methods for Implementation, Prevention Science, and Department of Biostatistics, Yale University), Dong Roman Xu (Southern Medical University Institute for Global Health (SIGHT), Dermatology Hospital, Southern Medical University

TL;DR
The paper introduces the Learn-As-you-GO (LAGO) design, a novel adaptive trial methodology for optimizing complex health interventions during the study to improve effectiveness and reduce costs.
Contribution
It presents the LAGO design, a new adaptive trial approach for optimizing multi-component health interventions in real-time, addressing limitations of traditional randomized trials.
Findings
LAGO can potentially prevent trial failures like the BetterBirth study.
It allows real-time optimization of intervention components.
The design is applicable to diverse health intervention trials.
Abstract
In the face of vast numbers of preventable deaths worldwide and gaping disparities in their distribution, we cannot afford to conduct null and inconclusive effectiveness and implementation trials of evidence-based interventions. The gold standard in biomedical research, the individually randomized clinical trial, is ill-suited as the primary tool for knowledge generation for contextually relevant, scalable, complex public health interventions of multi-component strategies. In this paper, we discuss the new Learn-As-you-GO (LAGO) design. In LAGO trials, the components of a complex intervention package are repeatedly optimized in pre-planned stages, until the package achieves its outcome and power goals with minimized cost and/or other optimization criteria, such as maximizing patient satisfaction. In this paper, the inputs to, and outputs of, LAGO are described, along with its general…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Policy Implementation Science · Global Maternal and Child Health · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions
