Title: Design and conduct of randomised controlled trials
1Design and conduct of randomised controlled trials
- David Torgerson
- Director, York Trials Unit
- djt6_at_york.ac.uk
- www.rcts.org
2Justification
- Randomised controlled trials are the key to
evidenced based practice. - The basic principles of the RCT are relatively
straight forward. - HOWEVER, many elementary mistakes are made that
undermine their design. - Whilst placebo trials are widely thought of as
being the gold-standard other trial designs are
as important if not more important to provide
evidence for decision making.
3The Need for Clinical Trials
4Background
- Traditionally most interventions have been
evaluated using a pre-test post-test or before
and after design. - Participants are tested treated and then tested
again any improvements are attributable to the
intervention. - Currently this is probably the most POPULAR
evaluative method.
5What is wrong with before and after studies
- "It is incident to physicians, I am afraid,
beyond all other men, to mistake subsequence for
consequence. (Samuel Johnson, 1734)
6Problems
- Problems include
- Temporal changes
- Regression to the mean.
7Temporal Change
- Most people get better or worse irrespective of
any medical attention. - Similarly in other fields (e.g. education)
self-learning irrespective of teaching occurs. - Any intervention or treatment is mixed up with
these temporal changes difficult to disentangle.
8Regression to the Mean
- As well as temporal changes before and after
studies are confounded by a statistical
phenomenon known as Regression to or towards the
mean
9Regression to the mean
- This is a GROUP phenomenon and occurs when the
group are measured with an inexact measurement
tool and then remeasured. Those individuals with
extreme values will have a high probability of
regressing towards the mean on the second
measurement.
10Components of RTM
- Statistically we have two components to a test
the true value plus a random error component. - The larger the value of the random error the
greater will be RTM. - Many clinicians and others are mislead because of
RTM.
11Economists and RTM
- I suspect that the regression fallacy is the
most common fallacy in the statistical analysis
of economic data - Milton Friedman 1992
12Regression to Mean using bone density
Cummings et al. JAMA 20002831318-21
13Same data dichotomised
Cummings et al. JAMA 20002831318-21
14Example of clinician confusion
- In routine care women not responding to a
bisphosphonate are given high dose vitamin D to
try and reverse bone loss.
Heckman et al. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
200236.
15(No Transcript)
16Authors conclusion
- In patients not responding to bisphosphonates
1000 vitamin D daily may improve BMD. - So what if they are wrong? Vit D is harmless?
- BUT an RCT of high dose vitamin D showed a
significant INCREASE in hip fractures among the
treated group!
17Another clinical fallacy
- A recent conference presentation, using
observational before and after data, made the
suprising observation that bisphosphonate therapy
may reduce the number and incidence of falls.
18Effect of Bisphosphonate on Falls
Population Risk of Falls
19Effect of Bisphosphonate on Falls
Population Risk of Falls
Change p lt 0.001
20Do bisphosphonates reduce falls?
- This suprising positive effect of
bisphosphonates warrants further study as one
possible additional explanation as to why
fracture rates are reduced with bisphosphonate
treatment - Explanation is probably Regression to Mean.
21Two further abstracts at same conference
- One was an RCT of vitamin D injections. Placebo
injections were also given. Patients had low BMD
placebo group increased by 3 in one year (not
diff from active group). - Next abstract before and after with calcitriol
bone mass increased by 1.21, among women
selected with low BMD. Conclusion Calcitriol
prevented bone loss at hip and spine - Did it? Probably RTM.
22Policy Changes
- Regression to the mean is an excellent method of
proving something works - Failing hospitals can have an expensive
management change and there is a good chance that
regression to the mean will do the job. - A NHS authority sent for retraining the 10 of
cytologists who had the highest error rate
training was highly effective!
23Solution to weakness of before and after studies
- To control both for regression to the mean and
temporal effects it is ESSENTIAL that evaluations
have a contemporaneous control group.
24Choice of Control Groups
- Not ALL control groups are equal. Only control
groups formed by randomisation or a similar
procedure (e.g., minimisation) are robust.
25Selection Bias
- All non randomised studies are susceptible to
selection bias. - Selection bias means that comparator groups are
not equal in all variables except for the
treatment. Selection for treatment may be based
on a variable that predicts outcome.
26Selection Bias What are its Effects?
27Hormone Replacement Therapy
- Non-randomised studies have shown that HRT is
associated with reductions in cardiovascular
disease, dementia and all cause mortality. - This view prevailed until a large (n 16,000)
RCT was undertaken.
28Trial Evidence
- Early trial in men of oestrogens in 1970s stopped
increased mortality due to cardiovascular events. - HERS trial in mid 1990s among women with Angina
showed INCREASED risk of cardiovascular risk. - Trial of 16,000 women (WHI study) stopped early
in 2001 because of INCREASE in cardiovascular
deaths.
29HRT what happened?
- Women who took HRT tended to be different from
those who did not. They took more exercise had a
better diet both of which reduces cardiovascular
disease. - The association was due to these factors NOT HRT.
- Because of these SELECTION effects we need to
undertake randomised trials.
30Why Randomisation?
- Randomisation WILL on average create two or more
groups that are equivalent in all important
characteristics that affect outcome. - Because of this the introduction of a treatment
in one group will therefore produce and UNBIASED
estimate of effect.
31Randomisation
- Production of equivalent groups will control for
regression to the mean, temporal changes and
selection bias.
32Failure of medicine
- Because of LACK of RCTs in many areas unproven,
harmful, treatments have been given to many
patients. - History of medicine is littered with examples of
introducing unproven treatments to patients
before controlled rigorous evaluation.
33Opposition to RCTs
- The use of the RCT in health care has met
sustained opposition from many clinicians. - This has led to many disasters.
34Opposition
- I found but one person who rigidly adherred to
the idea of a placebo control and he is a
bio-statistician who, if he did not adhere to
this view, would have had to admit his own
purposelessness in life (Jonas Salk).
35Health Care Disasters
- Opposition to RCTs has declined over the years,
partly due to a number of catastrophes, from
unevaluated treatments. - Harmful treatments are still in widespread use
today we just dont know which ones.
36Disasters among babies
- Routine practice in 40s and 50s to give premature
infants pure oxygen. At the same time it was
noted that there was an epidemic of blindness
among babies. Linked to oxygen use. - Routine practice in 50s to give prophylactic
antibiotics to premature infants, caused brain
damage and death. - BOTH of these problems only discovered AFTER an
RCT was undertaken.
37Heart Attacks
- After heart attack survivors can be placed into
two groups - Those with arrhythmia those without.
- Arrhythmia patients have a much HIGHER risk of
subsequent death. - There are drugs that can correct cardiac
arrhythmias. - These were widely used on millions of patients.
38CAST Trials
- For decades researchers tried to evaluate
arrhythmia drugs. - Not ETHICAL argued many cardiologists.
- Finally, CAST trial was started, terminated early
in 1989 because of INCREASE in deaths on active
drug. - 100s of thousands died because of this.
39Can it still HAPPEN?
- Supplementation with folate increases risk of MI
(2005) - Use of intravenous steroids after head injury
increases mortality (2004) - HRT INCREASES strokes, myocardial infarction and
dementia (2002). - Counselling women after difficult labour
INCREASES depression (2001)
40Development of the Controlled Trial.
- Many researchers over the centuries have seen the
need for a control group to avoid the inherent
biases in the before and after study. - Controlled trials have been conducted for several
hundred years probably occasionally using
randomisation.
41Scurvy
- Scurvy was a very prevalent condition among
sailors before the 19th Century. - A controlled trial in the middle of the 18th
Century of 12 sailors showed that the two sailors
allocated to receive lime or orange juice
recovered compared to their ship mates allocated
to vinegar or salt water.
42Medical Care 1810
- Standard medical care in the early 1800s
included routine bleeding. - Practised by many if not most doctors in the 18th
and early 19th Centuries. - Chalmers reports a controlled trial undertaken
during the Peninsular War comparing bleeding with
no bleeding of sick soldiers.
43Mortality after Bleeding
44Cambridge-Somerville
- In 1937 a classic experiment the
Cambridge-Somerville trial was launched. - The aim was to show that social worker
intervention among delinquent boys would reduce
criminality.
45Design
- 650 boys were identified by their teachers has
having delinquent behaviour that put them at
later risk of criminal activity. - 325 pairs were formed and one from each pair was
allocated a social worker supported by
psychiatrists.
46Results early follow-up of boys indulging in
crime.
Pale bar indicates intervention grop
47Results later follow-up
- In 1975 boys were followed up again when middle
aged men. - 58 of intervention group had NOT had a criminal
conviction - BUT 68 of control group had NOT had a
conviction. - If a control group had not been used success of
the intervention would be assured.
48Patulin Trial
- Perhaps the first placebo controlled trial was
the 1944 MRC patulin trial for the treatment of a
common cold. - 1449 patients included in the trial. Percent
cured or improved at 48 hours was 77 for placebo
and 73 for patulin.
49Streptomycin
- The first randomised trial in health care of a
BENEFICIAL treatment was the MRCs steptomycin
trial. - Streptomycin expensive antibiotic, unknown
efficacy for pulmonary TB. - UK could not afford to buy much due to virtual
postwar bankruptcy. - Randomisation was seen as fair method of
allocating scarce drug.
50Streptomycin Results
Streptomycin Control
Improvement 69 33
No change 4 6
Worse 20 34
Death 7 27
51Streptomycin
- Note 1/3rd of the control patients improved
despite no antibiotic - Patulin Trials were methodologically important
- Used random allocation
- Blinding of doctors, patients, assessors
- Allocation of treatment was concealed
- Placebo (for patulin).
52Summary
- Failure to do timely controlled trials has cost
many 000s of lives. - All new treatments need to be evaluated using the
RCT.