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Core Characteristics of Randomized Clinical Trials. Alec Walker September 2013. Preplanned Analysis. Goals Primary Secondary Strategy for unanticipated results Study size Statistical power Stopping rules. Preplanned Data Collection. Baseline
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Core Characteristics of Randomized Clinical Trials Alec Walker September 2013
Preplanned Analysis Goals • Primary • Secondary • Strategy for unanticipated results Study size • Statistical power • Stopping rules
Preplanned Data Collection Baseline • Characteristics of each participant’s history • Concomitant illnesses • Diagnostic tests and procedures • Medical examination Treatment • Dose, route, frequency, duration, timing Endpoints • Symptoms and tests required for diagnosis Safety • Adverse outcomes • Contemporaneous assessment of causality
Entry Criteria Treated disease • Definition • Severity, Prognosis Other health conditions • Concomitant diseases Others • Demographics – age, sex, race Implicit Criteria • Populations served by participating clinical sites • See also Informed Consent later Goals • 1o Clarify the comparison • 2oGeneralizabilty to target population
Comparison of Results in Groups Groups • Anecdotes, however persuasive, are set aside • Frequency of outcome is the measure of effect • We are examining net effects • Improved as a result of treatment • No effect of treatment • Deleterious effect of treatment Comparisons • Substitution of another person’s experience for the impossible “What if?” question. (Counterfactual: What would have been the treated person’s experience if there had been no treatment?)
Informed Consent • Introduced for ethical reasons • Patients should be aware that they are participating in an experiment • Actively agree to enter • A subtle selection criterion • Language skills • Education • Trust in the medical care system • Inclination to follow directions
Random Assignment of Treatments • “Coin flip” metaphor • Mechanical process • Assignment not systematically associated with any patient characteristics • At the discretion of the investigator: • Number of compared treatments • Allocation ratio • Blocking • Effects • Expectation of similar outcomes between groups under the Null Hypothesis • Justification for the calculation of p-values
Randomization • Treatment allocation is determined by a process • That generates An expectation of zero correlation between treatment and predictors of outcome. • The Predictors may be • Known or unknown to the experimenter • Measured or unmeasured • Measured poorly or well
Balance • All characteristics other than treatment are balanced in expectation • Measured and unmeasured • Predictors and correlates of predictors • The intermediate states that later arise from these
Balance • All characteristics other than treatment are balanced in expectation • Measured and unmeasured • Predictors and correlates of predictors • The intermediate states that later arise from these • Unadjusted estimates are unbiased estimates of treatment effect • Differences, ratios, more complex functions of • Risk, rates, hazards, survival, … • Costs, QoL, … • Even of dependent happenings, like epidemics (provided that exposure groups are not intermixed)
Treatment Adherence • Commitment from patients • Encouragement from staff • Monitoring • Pill counts • Blood level
Dedicated Outcome Data Collection • Disease prespecified • Expert consensus on diagnosis • Symptoms • Signs • Diagnostic testing • Recurrent monitoring
Limited Follow-up • Need to get drug to market • For chronic conditions, no amount of follow-up will reproduce ultimate conditions of use • Surrogate outcomes • Examples • Control of blood pressure or HbA1c • Patient-reported outcomes • Desiderata • Well established correlates of clinically important • Generally not important clinically in themselves • Manifest earlier • Real clinical outcomes can be addressed later
Problems Solved, Problems Remaining • Randomization in RCTs provides the gold standard for inference • No hypothesis of confounding • Frequentist interpretation of measures is supported by the structure of the trial • RCT populations may be atypical • In baseline characteristics • In adherence to therapy • In care of follow-up • RCT follow-up may be short