Evidence based practice Flashcards

(46 cards)

1
Q

Which 8 groups have the fewest trials performed on them?

A
  • Women, particularly pregnant women
  • Children
  • Elderly people
  • People with heart disease
  • Epileptics
  • Alcoholics
  • Drug abusers
  • People with learning disabilities
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2
Q

What are observational studies?

A
  • Non-experimental: no risk to patients
  • No control over exposures assigned but can select subjects included
  • Confounding will occur
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3
Q

How do you select a cohort?

A

Need to be free of outcome under study at the start
Can all join at the start = fixed cohort
Or can join during time period = dynamic cohort

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4
Q

What is incidence rate and how do you calculate it?

A

Incidence rate takes changes in population counts into account

The number of new cases of the disease within a specific time period

Incidence rate = Number of new cases / Disease-free person-time at risk

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5
Q

What is risk?

A

Risk: probability that an individual will be diagnosed with outcome over the follow up period
Assumes that they don’t have the outcome already

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6
Q

What is risk ratio?

A

Risk Ratio = incidence (exposed) / incidence (unexposed)

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7
Q

Follow-up within cohort study

A

Length of follow-up required will be dependent on the outcome you are wishing to evaluate

Follow-up is a potential weakness of a cohort study

Loss to follow-up can bias the results if those who are followed-up differ from those who are lost to follow-up

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8
Q

What are covariates (controlled variables)?

A

Age of those included
Whether more males or females included
Other diagnoses
Other medications
Smoking, BMI, socioeconomic status

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9
Q

What are the 5 strengths of cohort studies?

A
  • Efficient for rare exposures
  • Multiple effects can be studied
  • Studies are less prone to bias
  • Can calculate incidence rates, relative risks
  • Temporal relationship easier to establish
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10
Q

What are the 2 limitations of cohort studies?

A
  • Can have difficulties with loss to follow-up
  • May have problems with bias
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11
Q

What is matching in studies?

A

Method used to try to overcome confounding
Often match on age and sex but other matching possible

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12
Q

What are the 3 advantages of case-control studies?

A
  • Results are available quickly and usually fairly cheaply
  • Good for rare diseases or those with long latent periods
  • Look at multiple aetiologic factors for a single disease
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13
Q

What are the 4 disadvantages of case-control studies?

A
  • Inefficient for rare exposures (you need to have some chance of exposure in the cases and controls)
  • Can’t calculate incidence or prevalence of disease
  • Difficult to establish temporal relationships
  • More prone to bias than cohort studies – particularly selection and recall bias
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14
Q

What are the 3 comparisons of cohort and case control studies?

A

Cohort - group without outcome
Case - group with outcome

Cohort - calculate relative risk
Case - calculate odds ratio

Cohort - exposure known
Case - event status known

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15
Q

What are the two types of bias?

A

Information bias
- recall
- measurement
- misclassification

Selection bias
- volunteer
- selection of controls and cases

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16
Q

What is confounding?

A

The distortion of a risk estimate due to the mixture of the people in the study population

A confounder is a risk factor for the disease and is correlated with the exposure independent of disease

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17
Q

Confounding by indication

A

A factor’s ability to be a confounder is entirely dependent on whether it is unevenly distributed between the study groups

The indication for prescription is one of the most important factors to consider when evaluating medication exposures

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18
Q

What is channelling?

A

Where a drug is prescribed to a group of patients because of
a characteristic of the drug
a characteristic of that group of patients
usually is a new drug

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19
Q

What are the 4 ways to control for confounding?

A

Randomisation - even distribution of confounders

Restriction - gives more control but cannot study variation between levels of that factor

Matching - each case is paired with a control subject for specified constraint/confounder
- Can be difficult to find a match
- Only controls for the criteria that have been matched on

Stratified analysis - separating out factors so any mixture of their effect is removed

20
Q

What is an effect modifier?

A

Effect modification occurs when the effect of the exposure is different in different groups of the population

A factor that modifies the effect of a putative causal factor under study

There is no average ‘true value’

21
Q

What are phase I trials?

A

Safety and dosage
20 – 80 healthy volunteers
Several months

22
Q

What are phase II trials?

A

Efficacy and side effects
~ few hundred people with disease of interest
Several months to 2 years

23
Q

What are phase III trials?

A

Efficacy and monitoring adverse reactions
300-3000 people with disease of interest
1 to 4 years

24
Q

What are phase IV trials?

A

Required by regulator to follow up drug once released to marked
Trying to identify adverse events

Trying to determine any long term harm

25
Consequences of ‘getting it wrong’
Visible - putting poison on the market Invisible - witholding lifesaving treatment
26
Spontaneous reports of adverse events
Introduced following thalidomide Spontaneous reports sent by healthcare professionals and patients to pharmaceutical companies Yellow card scheme Methodology for monitoring safety of all marketed medicines Primary function: To provide early warnings of unknown adverse effects of medicines Historically: problem was where to find signals Now: large databases of signals so how to identify early, relevant signals
27
Causality from case reports
Either the event was caused by the drug or not Can this be determined definitely? What is the relationship between the event and the exposure being considered? Totally linked? Partially linked? Independent?
28
Types of adverse reaction
Type A – drug effect Type B – patient reaction Type C – where drug increases the frequency of spontaneous disease
29
Signal determination
Here, a signal is defined as PRR ≥2 and chi2 ≥ 4 and ≥4 case reports ROR: lower confidence interval >1 IC: lower confidence interval > 0 EBGM ≥ 2
30
Pharmacovigilance
the detection, assessment and prevention of adverse drug effects in humans’ (WHO) Detection of unknown adverse events and interactions Identification of risk factors and quantification of risk for known adverse reactions Detection of increases in frequency of adverse reactions Information dissemination
31
Pharmacoepidemiology
The principles of chronic disease epidemiology applied to the area of clinical pharmacology How is the drug used? What are the predictors of use? What are the outcomes?
32
Thalidomide
- Despite rubella causing birth defects, little consideration given to drug effects on foetus until thalidomide - One third of women using thalidomide gave birth to babies with defects, (limb, bowel, ear, eye, heart, gallbladder, uterus malformations) - 40% of thalidomide victims died before 1st birthday
33
What did thalidomide teach us?
- Animal testing: mice usually used for safety screening but later found to be insensitive to thalidomide. Now several species are used in in vivo testing - Timing of exposure: if thalidomide was taken before the 34th day OR after the 50th day then no malformations were present - Earlier exposure can lead to miscarriage; late exposure to brain damage
34
Two types of exposure during pregnancy
Unavoidable exposure chronic underlying conditions e.g. epilepsy acute conditions e.g. infection Inadvertent exposure ~30-50% of pregnancies are unplanned
35
What is known about drug safety in pregnancy?
- Very little is known when a medicine is first marketed about its safety when used during pregnancy - Between 2011 and 2013 the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved 95 new medicines - only 3 had human pregnancy experience at the time of approval – based on prior use in other countries - In a study of 172 medicines approved by the FDA between 2000 and 20101, the teratogenic risk in human pregnancy was undetermined for 168 (97.7%). - US study found 1 in 6 pregnant women receives a prescription for a potentially teratogenic medication but only 50% receive counselling
36
Pregnant women excluded from trials?
- Pregnant women are often excluded from clinical trials - Preclinical animal studies are often not predictive of human risk - Not possible to assume a ‘class effect’ - Gaps in our knowledge of teratogenic mechanisms - Birth defects are rare and drug exposures can be rare - Baby is an “Innocent bystander”
37
Postmarketing surveillance
Virtually impossible to evaluate the safety of a medicine before it is granted a licence Need to monitor pregnancy outcomes once the product is on the market Aims to collect sufficient information to allow women and their healthcare professionals to balance the risks and benefits of medication use during pregnancy
38
Purpose built surveillance systems
Developed during 1970s/early 1980s Case-control surveillance systems Recruit infants with and without congenital anomalies from hospitals or birth registries Aim to evaluate associations between medicine use and pregnancy outcomes Some still actively recruiting today
39
Teratology Information Services (TIS)
Point of contact for women and healthcare professionals who need advice and information regarding in-utero exposures Women who have voluntarily contacted them in search of information on the safety of a medicine they are using are recruited Valuable signal generating tool Information on large number of confounding variables
40
Pregnancy exposure registries
First registry in 1984 Observational study Aim to identify major teratogens ≥ a 10-fold increase in risk requires ~1000 enrolled pregnancies
41
Pregnancy exposure registries limitations
Self enrolment Loss to follow-up Small numbers Slow enrolment - GSK lamotrigine pregnancy registry - took 10 years to enrol the first 1,000 pregnancies Suitable comparator group
42
Strengths of electronic healthcare data
Often provide representative sample Routinely recorded Exposure data recorded prospectively Internal comparator(s) Some capture pregnancy losses Sample size
43
4 weaknesses of electronic healthcare data
- No OTC medicines or in-patient prescribing - Don’t know whether medicine was taken - Outcome data may lack detail/completeness and accuracy - Sample size
44
Importance of capturing pregnancy losses
- Spontaneous losses or stillbirths might be the outcome of interest - Advances in prenatal screening mean some women who are prenatally diagnosed with a severe birth defect may opt to terminate
45
Pregnancy prevention plans (PPPs)
- For a relatively small number of medicines, there is now sufficient evidence to demonstrate that the product is highly teratogenic when used during pregnancy - For some individuals, however, the benefits of treatment with one of these products cannot be achieved from other products - PPPs aim to allow women of child bearing potential to use highly teratogenic products whilst ensuring they are not pregnant when they start treatment and do not become pregnant during therapy or within an appropriate time period after stopping treatment.
46
Isotretinoin (Accutane) as a tertogen
- Treatment for severe recalcitrant nodular acne - Animal studies had identified concerns that there could be potential teratogenicity - However, it has a unique efficacy with a 5 month course often resulting in a cure and it has a short half life meaning the period of risk is limited - Whilst on the market between 1982 and 1988 evidence of human teratogenicity was documented