2 - Clinical Trials Flashcards
What is the gold standard for clinical trials?
Blind randomised controlled trial as blinding reduces bias, random minimises confoundiing and comparison with a control enables additional therapeutic benefit
What is the definition and purpose of a clinical trial?
- Form of planned experiment which involves patients and is used to decide the most appropriate method of treatment for future patients
- Used to collect evidence of the efficacy and safety of the treatment in testing
- After results you then look at 95% CI to see if statistically significant and if p>0.05 due to 1 in CI then can reject null
What does efficacy and safety mean when testing a treatment in a clinical trial?
Efficacy: ability of the intervention to improve health
Safety: ability of the intervention to do no harm
In order to be a fair comparison of efficacy and safety what three conditions must a clinical trial satisfy?
RANDOMISED CONTROL TRIAL
What are the different phases of drug development?
- Research: look at lots of compounds and animal testing may be implemented. Screening of different compounds through HTS
- I: small no of healthy volunteers
- II: small no of patients with disease
- III: large no of patients with disease and first control
- IV: long term safety after approval
What are the disadvantages of non-randomised clinical trials and the use of historical controls in a clinical trial?
- Non-random: allocation bias and confounding
- Historical controls: selection less defined, old group may be treated differently (e.g different hospital protocols decades ago), less information about confounders, unable to control confounders
What are the steps involved in a RCT?
1. Define the factors: disese of interest, treatments being compared, outcomes being measured, possible confounders, eligible patients
2. Conduct the trial: identify a source of patients and invite/consent eligible patients to the trial. Allocate the patients in a random way to stop allocation bias and confounding, e.g random number generator. Follow up patients and minimise loss
3. Comparison of Outcomes: is there an observed difference, is it statistically significant, is it clinicall important or a big enough difference, was the study design good
What is the p value?
p<0.05 as the null hypothesis is out of the CI so cannot reject the null
Why must outcomes be defined before a clinical trial?
- Prevent data dredging and repeated analysis
- Created a protocol for data collection and agreed criteria for measurement of outcomes
What are the different type of outcomes measured in a clinical trial?
- Primary outcome: main outcome and preferably the only one
- Secondary outcome: any other outcomes of interest e.g side effects
What are some features of an ideal outcome to investigate?
- Relevant
- Valid
- Sensitive
- Specific
- Cheap
Best outcomes should be followed up for a long time but often too expensive
When in a clinical trial should you measure outcomes?
- Baseline at beginning to look for differences in groups
- During the trial to see if patients are being harmed or disadvantaged
- Final measurement at the end
What are the advantages of random allocation?
- Random allocation allocates participants to treatments fairly, e.g equal number of smokers in each group
- Better with larger studies and historicals that use random allocation can be used
Why may the clinician or the patient knowing the treatment allocation cause bias in the results?
What is blinding and the purpose of it in a clincial trial?
- Used to minimise measurement bias, allocation bias and stop patients altering their behaviour
- Difficult to do if treatment is surgical, if two treatments give different side effects or alternative medicine