Study Design (Segars) Flashcards

1
Q

In interventional study designs, list in order of increasing evidence:

A

Phase 0 –> Phase 1 –> Phase 2 –> Phase 3 –> Phase 4

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2
Q

In observational study designs, list order of increasing evidence:

A

Cross sectional –> Case control –> Cohort

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3
Q

__=outcome is NOT yet known at start of study

__=outcome IS already known at the start of the study

A

prospective

retrospective

if don’t know the outcome at the beginning, its a prospective study

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4
Q

which studies prospective only?

A

Phase 0-4 (interventional)

Cohort (Observational)

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5
Q

Is researcher forcing group allocation?
Yes=__
No=__

A

Yes –> Interventional (Buzz word=Randomization) (sample size/focus/duration)

No –> Observational (outcome/exposure)

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6
Q

If you see “randomization” in a question stem, its what study design?

A

Interventional

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7
Q

For observational studies, if groups organized by DISEASE STATUS, it is a __ study

A

Case-control/Nested case-control

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8
Q

For observational studies, if groups organized by EXPOSURE STATUS, it is a __ study

A

Cohort

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9
Q

For observational studies, if “together d/t a common factor”, it is a __ study

A

cohort

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10
Q

For observational studies, if data collected across large population, it is a __ study

A

cross-sectional

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11
Q

A case-control design is useful when studying a rare disease. It commonly generates an __ for each and an __ as measure of association

A

Odds of exposure

Odds ratio (OR)

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12
Q

Case control studies are customarily conducted in a __ fashion.

A

Retrospective

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13
Q

A __ study derived from w/in or out of a cohort or interventional study

A

Nested case control

disease/outcome subjects from ‘other’ study become the cases of a subsequent (different) study

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14
Q

a __ design is useful when studying a rare exposure. Commonly generates the Risk of disease/outcome for each and a RR as measure of association

A

cohort

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15
Q

Cohort studies can be conducted in a __ fashion

A

retrospective or prospectve (or both)

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16
Q

In Case control, which boxes?

In Cohorts, which boxes?

A

Disease presence –> Column totals (A+C and B+D)

Exposure –> row totals (A+B and C+D)

17
Q

A Group with something in common, i.e., Birth/inception/exposure/etc. is characteristic of __

BIG STAR

A

cohort study

Framingham heart study, nurses health study

18
Q

Think of a __ study when the info gathered represents what is going on with disease AND exposures (at the same time) across the entire (a large) study population

A

x-sectional

“snap-shot” in time; examine relationships between disease AND exposure

19
Q

Any survey that says “National” is a __ study

A

X-sectional

20
Q

This interventional phase study is exploratory, investigational new drug, healthy volunteers, very small (<20), very short duration

A

0

21
Q

This interventional phase study is for investigational new drug, assess safety/tolerance and PK of or more dosages, can have healthy or disease volunteers (depends on disease), small N (20-80), short duration (few weeks)

A

1

22
Q

This interventional phase study is for investigation new drug in the indicated population. Assess effectiveness, diseased volunteers (narrow inclusion criteria for isolation of effects), larger N (100-300), short-medium duration (few wks to months)

A

2

23
Q

This interventional phase study is for investigational new drug, indicated population. Assess effectiveness, diseased volunteers (may expand inclusion criteria and comparison groups for delineation of effects; Various stat-perspectives can be taken in studies such as superiority, non superiority, and equivalency), larger N (500-3000), longer durations (few months to years)

A

3

24
Q

this interventional phase study is post FDA-approval. Registries/surverys also used in observational design

A

4

25
Q

this interventional study format has subjects randomly allocated ONCE into a single tx group

A

Simple

26
Q

this interventional study format has subjects randomly allocated into an initial group, then further randomly subdivided into a subgroup (multiple randomizations)

A

Factorial

useful in testing multiple hypotheses at the same time

27
Q

This interventional study format has subjects exclusively managed in a single tx group. No switching groups after initial randomization

A

Parallel

28
Q

This interventional study format has subjects forcibly switched to other tx group after initial tx assignment

A

X-over

Between & within group comparisons possible

29
Q

which group allocation procedure most commonly utilized?

A

Random –> subjects have equal probability of being assigned to each of the pre-defined intervention groups

30
Q

this form of randomization ensures balance within known confounding variables

A

Stratified

31
Q

This form of blinding is neither investigators nor study subjects are informed which intervention (tx) group subjects are in

A

Double blind

32
Q

Most conservative method of managing drop outs/lost to follow up by including them

A

intent to tx

  • preserves randomization process
  • maintains Power
33
Q

__ role is to protect human subjects from undue risk. All human subject studies MUST be reviewed by them PRIOR TO study starting

A

IRB

34
Q

__ role is as a semi-independent committee not involved with conduct of study but charged with reviewing data AS STUDY PROGRESSES to assess for undue risk of benefit

A

DSMB

can stop study early