Title: Research Study Designs
1Research Study Designs
2Experimental Study Design
- Best design for determining efficacy of
treatment Randomized, controlled, double
blinded, experimental designed study. - Experimental study can be controlled or
non-controlled. - Randomized or non-randomized
- Double blinded, single blinded or no blinding
- A randomized controlled trial (study) may be
described as prospective, longitudinal,
follow-up, and experimental.
3Randomized Controlled Trial
- Patients are assigned to one of two or more
groups that receive a treatment or intervention
and are followed over time for a measured
outcome. - Some patients are designated as the control group
which serves as the comparison group and which a
placebo or sugar pill or a comparison drug is
given - Both groups are compared on the outcomes and
treatment effectiveness is determined.
4Randomized Controlled Trial
- Advantages
- Utilizes a control group (strongest evidence)
- Bias is minimized
- Extraneous factors being responsible for outcomes
is minimized. - Most reliable technique for evaluating treatments
- Most statistically powerful study design
5Randomized Controlled Trial
- Disadvantages
- Expensive
- Patient enrollment can be difficult (time length)
- Drop out rate is higher because of long term
follow-up (required by FDA) - Ethical problems in testing new therapies in
humans - Time necessary to perform study can be long.
- Most complex to interpret.
6Experimental Controlled Study Example
- To determine whether Retin A cream can reduce
wrinkle formation, investigators recruited 100
healthy subjects from 65-70 y.o. and randomized
them to receive Retin A or placebo. They applied
the cream 2x daily for 1 year. A dermatologist
rated the degree of facial wrinkles using a scale
from 1-10 at the beginning and end of the study
for all participants and compared the two groups.
7Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) Summary
- The RCT design is suitable for most types of
pharmaceutical research. - It is considered to be the most statistically
powerful study design. - The major difference between the clinical trial
and other designs is the ability of the
investigator to actively intervene, rather than
simply observe.
8Non-controlled experimental Study
- Does not utilized a control group.
- The drug treatment procedure to be studied is
administered to a single group of patients. - Outcome measures are determined in this group.
9Non-controlled experimental Study Example
- A study to determine the efficacy of Zofran in
prevention and treatment of Cisplatin induced
nausea and vomiting (NV) was done. 50 patients
receiving Cisplatin for ovarian cancer were given
Zofran at the start of Cisplatin therapy. The
number of episodes of nausea and vomiting were
recorded. Only 10 rated the NV as severe.
Investigators concluded that Zofran is effective
in minimizing Cisplatin induced NV.
10Design Types of Controlled Experimental Studies
- Parallel design
- Crossover design
- Time series design (Before and After)
11Differences between types of controlled
experimental designs
- Different outcomes can be measured more
accurately with different designs. - Different statistical tests are applied to
different study designs. - Different bias risks are inherent in each design
12Parallel Design
- A parallel design includes independent study
groups and each group receives a different
treatment regimen or intervention - Randomized Controlled Trials are often parallel
design - Parallel design is more useful for studying
conditions which are prone to change over time
(pain, acute exacerbations of a disease,
remissions) - ExampleIn a study to evaluate the efficacy of
beta blockers for hypertension, 24 patients are
randomized into two groups of 12 patients. One
group is then treated with a beta blocker and the
other treated with placebo.
13Crossover Design
- A crossover design may have just one study group
that receives all of the treatments (ie. Drug and
placebo). - It is more statistically sensitive and efficient,
using fewer patients. - Fewer patients can lead to a more homogenous
group with less variability in measurement. (Less
variability between groups implies a measured
difference is more likely to be due to treatment
effects instead of interpatient variability.
14Cross-Over Design Example
- In a study to evaluate the efficacy of beta
blockers for hypertension patients, 12 patients
would be enrolled into the study and 6 patients
would be assigned to treatment with the beta
blocker first, followed by placebo treatment and
the other 6 patients would receive the same
treatments in reverse order, all having a washout
period in-between treatments.
15Cross-Over Design
- Advantages
- Smaller number of patients are required since the
same patient groups receive both treatments - The ability to analyze patients both within
groups as well as between groups - Within groups baseline factors (age, gender
differences) which could influence the results
are eliminated because patients serve as their
own control group. - Between groups Evaluate the effect of time on
the results (we can see what the patient does
during the placebo time period as well as what he
does during treatment period)
16Cross-Over Design
- Disadvantages
- Time involved for a crossover design is longer
than other design types - More drop outs because of time involved.
- Study design is very sensitive to drop outs since
small number of patients involved. - Period effects
- Sequence effects
- Carry over effects
17 Period Effects
- Differences between treatment groups over
passages of time. - Period effects occur because patients are
observed at least twice and their condition may
change between the first and second observation. - Period effects increase within-person
variability, which reduces the power of the
design and decreases the advantage of a
cross-over design study
18Period Effect Variables
- Depressed patients may be less depressed during
the 2nd treatment period simply because
depression tends to improve over time. - Learned effects
- Development of tolerance or resistance
- Changes in the disease state
- Psychological variables pain syndromes,
exacerbation of exzema, multiple sclerosis acute
flare ups, etc.
19Sequence Effects
- Changes in the effectiveness of the drug
treatment produced by the order in which the
drugs were administered. - Appear statistically as interactions.
Interactions affect the interpretation of the
results because the magnitude of the treatment
differences is not consistent.
20Carry-over effect
- When the effects of the drug given during the
first period persists into the second period. - Carryover effects only affect the treatment
response in the 2nd time period. - Can be eliminated by using a washout period
between treatments. This allows the patient to
return to baseline levels before the 2nd
treatment is started.
21Carry-over effects
- The ability to remove the influence of carryover
effects through the use of a washout period
differentiates carry-over and period effects. - Period effects represent long term or permanent
changes in the subject that are unlikely to be
eliminated with a washout period. - Carry-over effects represent temporary changes
secondary to continued presence of the drug in
the system, such as for a drug with a long
half-life persisting into the 2nd treatment
period, but the effects of the drug with a short
half-life not persisting
22Cross-Over Design
- One risk is that this design is not powerful
enough to detect a clinically important
interaction of period, sequence or carry-over
effect. - If the interaction is clinically significant,
then you must transform the crossover study into
a parallel design to do the statistical analysis.
(defeats purpose of using less subjects and
saving money) - Types of studies good for cross-over design are
- bioavailability studies (interactions would be
less likely since the patients serve as their own
controls)
23Time Series (Before and After) Design
- Patients are studied before the experimental drug
is given. After the drug is given for a certain
amount of time, the patients are evaluated again
to determine the effects of the drug. - More than one drug can be tested with this type
of study design by continuing to administer drugs
in sequence.
24Times Series (Before and After)
- Advantages
- Certain factors which could influence the study
are eliminated (age, gender differences, etc) - Patients serve as their own controls so smaller
number of patients are needed (as compared to
parallel design)
25Times Series (Before and After)
- Disadvantages
- The disease/condition being treated can change
over time, unrelated to the drug treatment. - Carry-over effects could occur.
- Things that cause a carry-over effect
- Drugs with a long elimination half-life
- Drugs with active metabolites (esp. active
metabolites with long half-lives) - Drugs whose effects on the disease state being
treated persist after the drugs themselves are
eliminated from the body (lipophillic drugs)