lecture 3 - randomised controlled trials Flashcards

1
Q

What is clinical equipoise?

A

An ethical principle of randomised controlled trials that states that there must be genuine uncertainty about which intervention/treatment is better

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2
Q

What is a superiority trial?

A

A trial to determine whether a new treatment is superior to an existing treatment (or no treatment)

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3
Q

What is a non-inferiority trial?

A

A trial to evaluate whether a new treatment is no worse than an existing treatment

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4
Q

What is the limitation of using biomarkers as measures of outcome in RCTs?

A

They may not give an indication of clinical efficacy - e.g. quality of life, mortality

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5
Q

What is the key way that an RCT eliminates confounding?

A

By randomisation - divides patients into groups with the same distribution of characteristics

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6
Q

How can bias occur with the randomisation in an RCT?

A

If allocation is not blinded to researchers or patients, they may change their behaviour according to the group they are allocated.

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7
Q

How is allocation concealed in RCTs?

A

Blinding (of patient and researchers), placebo

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8
Q

How can bias be minimised during an RCT?

A

ensuring adherence to protocol (including making sure they have the assigned control or intervention), insuring retention/follow-up

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9
Q

What is intention to treat analysis?

A

If people don’t comply with their initially randomised groups, they are left in their original group for analysis

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10
Q

What is the purpose of intention to treat analysis?

A

Preserves randomisation and allows for better prediction of how treatments might work in a real life clinical setting, where there is unlikely to be complete adherence

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11
Q

What is a confidence interval?

A

A range of plausible values for the true effect of treatment in the target population

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12
Q

What is a p-value in an RCT?

A

A measure of the probability that we would have seen an effect as large or larger if the treatment did not actually work (i.e. the probability of a false positive result)

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13
Q

What value measures the probability of a falsely positive finding in an RCT?

A

p-value

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14
Q

What is the standard significance level of the p-value in an RCT?

A

p<0.05 = sufficient evidence of a treatment effect

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15
Q

What are the problems with multiple statistical analyses?

A

Inflation of chance of false positive test, interpretation problems with unplanned subgroups, bias due to subjective reporting of analyses favourable to treatment

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