ICH E9 Glossary Flashcards
Bayesian Approaches
Approaches to data analysis that provide a posterior probability distribution for some parameter (e.g. treatment effect), derived from the observed data and a prior probability distribution for the parameter. The posterior distribution is then used as the basis for statistical inference.
Bias (Statistical & Operational)
The systematic tendency of any factors associated with the design, conduct, analysis and evaluation of the results of a clinical trial to make the estimate of a treatment effect deviate from its true value. Bias introduced through deviations in conduct is referred to as ‘operational’ bias. The other sources of bias listed above are referred to as ‘statistical’.
Blind Review
The checking and assessment of data during the period of time between trial completion (the last observation on the last subject) and the breaking of the blind, for the purpose of finalising the planned analysis
Content Validity
The extent to which a variable (e.g. a rating scale) measures what it is supposed to
measure.
Double-Dummy
A technique for retaining the blind when administering supplies in a clinical trial, when the two treatments cannot be made identical. Supplies are prepared for Treatment A (active and indistinguishable placebo) and for Treatment B (active and indistinguishable placebo). Subjects then take two sets of treatment; either A (active) and B (placebo), or A (placebo) and B (active).
Equivalence Trial
A trial with the primary objective of showing that the response to two or more
treatments differs by an amount which is clinically unimportant. This is usually
demonstrated by showing that the true treatment difference is likely to lie between a
lower and an upper equivalence margin of clinically acceptable differences.
Frequentist Methods
Statistical methods, such as significance tests and confidence intervals, which can be interpreted in terms of the frequency of certain outcomes occurring in hypothetical repeated realisations of the same experimental situation.
Full Analysis Set
The set of subjects that is as close as possible to the ideal implied by the intention-to treat principle. It is derived from the set of all randomised subjects by minimal and justified elimination of subjects
Generalisability, Generalisation
The extent to which the findings of a clinical trial can be reliably extrapolated from
the subjects who participated in the trial to a broader patient population and a
broader range of clinical settings
Global Assessment Variable
A single variable, usually a scale of ordered categorical ratings, which integrates objective variables and the investigator’s overall impression about the state or change in state of a subject.
Independent Data Monitoring Committee (IDMC) (Data and Safety Monitoring Board, Monitoring Committee, Data Monitoring Committee)
An independent data-monitoring committee that may be established by the sponsor to assess at intervals the progress of a clinical trial, the safety data, and the critical efficacy endpoints, and to recommend to the sponsor whether to continue, modify, or stop a trial.
Intention-To-Treat Principle
The principle that asserts that the effect of a treatment policy can be best assessed by evaluating on the basis of the intention to treat a subject (i.e. the planned treatment regimen) rather than the actual treatment given. It has the consequence that subjects
allocated to a treatment group should be followed up, assessed and analysed as members of that group irrespective of their compliance to the planned course of treatment.
Interaction (Qualitative & Quantitative)
The situation in which a treatment contrast (e.g. difference between investigational product and control) is dependent on another factor (e.g. centre). A quantitative interaction refers to the case where the magnitude of the contrast differs at the different levels of the factor, whereas for a qualitative interaction the direction of the contrast differs for at least one level of the factor.
Inter-Rater Reliability
The property of yielding equivalent results when used by different raters on different occasions.
Intra-Rater Reliability
The property of yielding equivalent results when used by the same rater on different occasions