Randomised trials and other evidence Flashcards

1
Q

To distinguish intention-to-treat and on-treatment analyses.

A
ITT = ANALYSED BASED ON THE GROUP ALLOCATED, NOT ON WHO ACTUALLY TOOK THAT TREATMENT
OT = WHO ACTUALLY TOOK THE TREATMENT
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2
Q

Why are new treatments generally tested in randomised controlled trials?

A

To determine whether they are better than the existing treatments. To show small effects, studies must avoid bias.

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3
Q

What are single and double blinding?

A

Single blind – the participant does not know if they are in the treated or control group (a placebo is given)
Double blind – neither the participant nor the doctor
knows

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4
Q

What bias does blinding prevent?

A

Observer bias - avoids knowledge of treatment influencing:

  • patient’s assessment of response
  • doctor’s assessment of response
  • patient’s decision to withdraw from trial
  • doctor’s decision to withdraw patient from trial
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5
Q

What is a cross-over RCT?

A

Allocate half to group A (treatment group) and the other half to group B (control group). Group A has a treatment period, then control period and group B has a control period, then the treatment period.

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6
Q

When are parallel RCTs done?

A

When effect of treatment is curative e.g. – antibiotics for infection, chemotherapy for cancer

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7
Q

When are cross-over RCTs done?

A

When treatment is reversible – for example, analgesics for chronic pain (e.g. osteoarthritis), inhaler for asthma, drug to lower blood pressure

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8
Q

Advantages of cross-over trials over parallel group trials? (4)

A

Fewer participants
Avoids “scores” for quantifying subjective symptoms (e.g. pain)
Compares 2 drugs in the same individual (not one drug in person A and one in person B)
Can omit non-compliers in the analysis (because each participant is his/her own control)

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9
Q

Name two interventional trial study designs.

A

Parallel group randomised trial

Cross-over randomised trial

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10
Q

Name two observational trial study designs.

A
Cohort (or prospective) study
Case control (or retrospective) study
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11
Q

Describe a cohort study.

A

Take a group of people
Categorise each according to the exposure (e.g. smoker or non-smoker)
Follow them up
Identify those who develop the disease

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12
Q

Benefits of cohort studies. (2)

A

Can generate useful summaries

Rigorous

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13
Q

Describe a case control study.

A

Take samples of people who have the disease (cases) and who do not (controls)
Determine whether the cases are more likely to have been exposed

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14
Q

Disadvantages of cohort studies. (4)

A

Long duration (many years)
Large size (thousands of individuals)
Need large numbers (tens of thousands)
Susceptible to confounding

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15
Q

Advantages of case control studies. (2)

A

Quick

Need small numbers

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16
Q

Disadvantages of case control studies. (2)

A

Susceptible to bias, especially recall bias

Susceptible to confounding

17
Q

Advantages of RCTs. (1)

A

They eliminate bias

18
Q

Disadvantages of RCTs. (4)

A
  • Expensive
  • Maintaining high compliance difficult
  • They seldom exceed five years in duration (not well suited to long term effects)
  • Unsuited to behavioural exposures (smokers v non smokers, take v not take the contraceptive pill)
19
Q

What is the most appropriate study design to answer the question?
- Does vitamin D reduce the risk of hip fracture in elderly people?

A

Parallel group trial

20
Q

What is the most appropriate study design to answer the question?
- Does the measles/mumps/rubella vaccine cause autism?

A

Case-control study

21
Q

What is the most appropriate study design to answer the question?
- Does the contraceptive pill cause breast cancer?

A

Cohort study

22
Q

What is the most appropriate study design to answer the question?
- Do margarines with added sterols or stanols lower serum cholesterol?

A

Cross-over trial

23
Q

What is the most appropriate study design to answer the question?
- Does mental stress increase a person’s risk of myocardial infarction?

A

Parallel group - counselling v no counselling after MI

Cohort study - level of mental stress measured at outset

24
Q

What is the most appropriate study design to answer the question?
- Does driving my car after drinking a pint of beer
increase my chance of an accident?

A

Case control study

Cross-over trial (with surrogate endpoint)

25
Q

What is the meaning of P=0.05?

A

There is a 5% probability that this result (or one more extreme) could have arisen by chance if there was no genuine association at all.

26
Q

What does P<5% or <0.05 mean?

A

STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT
It does not mean the association is 95% likely to be causal. It does not exclude bias. It only applies to a study testing a prior hypothesis.

27
Q

What is a 95% confidence interval?

A

We are 95% certain that the “true” answer lies within the specified limits

28
Q

The larger the number treated, the _______ the confidence interval.

A

Narrower

29
Q

Do different causes of a disease usually interact additively or multiplicatively.?

A

Multiplicatively