Title: Introduction to Clinical Trials PartII
1Introduction to Clinical TrialsPart-II
2Research Cycle
Clinical Trials Research (human, comparative)
Translational Research
Basic Research (bench, animal)
Observational Research (human, epidemiological)
3Evidence-Based Medicine
- Ideally based on data from clinical trials
- Need to understand fundamentals of good design
and analysis - Not all published data of same quality
4TYPES OF EVIDENCE (1)
- Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT) is gold standard
- RCT minimizes bias
- Cant do RCTs for all important questions (time,
funding, ethics) - Must make choices on what evidence to use for
clinical guidelines
5TYPES OF EVIDENCE (2)
- Need to remember limitations of evidence clinical
guidelines based on - Continue to strive to improve evidence
- Need to read the literature critically
6TYPES OF EVIDENCE (3)
- Recent history teaches us to be cautious
- Not seeking most rigorous evidence has proven to
be problematic - Theory and observational studies based evidence
have not always led to correct conclusion for
important questions
7Types of Clinical Research
- 1. Case Report
- Anecdotal ? Problem
- 2. Observational
- a. Case-Control/Retrospective (lung cancer)
- b. Cross Sectional (WESDR) Beaver Dam
- c. Prospective (Framington) WESDR-II
- ? Associations
- 3. Drug Development Phase 0, Phase I, and Phase
II - 4. Experimental
- a. Historical Controls
- b. Concurrent (Non-randomized)
- c. Randomized
- ? Effect
8Definition of a Clinical Trial
- A prospective study comparing the effect and
value of intervention(s) against a control in
human subjects - NOTE
- Prospective not retrospective
- Intervention/Equipment
- preventive -drug
- therapeutic -device
- diagnostic -procedure
- -biologic
- Control Group
- no intervention -current standard therapy
- placebo (Diehl, 1938) -previous standard
- Humans not animals
- ethics
- informed consent
9Clinical Trials The Numerical Method
- Louis (1834) Essays on Clinical Instruction
- Introduced numerical methods or Counting
- Circumstances of age, sex, temperament and
physical condition - Real Difficulties in its Execution
- Requires more labor and time than the most
distinguished members of our profession can
dedicate to it.
10Clinical Trials
- Concept of Randomization in designed experiments,
introduced by Fisher into agriculture in 1926 - First randomized clinical trial 1931 by Amberson
in tuberculosis patients -
-
randomized
12
12
blinded
Control saline injection
Sano crysin (gold compound)
11Clinical TrialsUse of Randomization
- Multicenter Trials (1944) - Common Cold
- Medical Research Council
- Treatment of common cold
- Different sites all using common protocol
- Patulin vs. Placebo
- MRC Tuberculosis Trial (1948) - Grandfather Trial
- (Ref British Medical Journal, 1948)
- Randomized (by random numbers)
- Streptomycin vs. Placebo
- Based on work of Bradford Hill, founder of modern
day clinical trial - Supported Concept of Randomization
12The General Flow of Statistical Inference
Sample Protocol Patients On Study
Patient Population
Observed Results
Inference about Population
Sample of Opportunity random or non-random?
13Ethics and Clinical Trials
- Background
- History
- Code of federal regulations
- Ethical issues informing the patient
- Recent developments
- Ethical omniscience
14Ethics
- Moral quality of a course of action
- Rules or standards governing the conduct of a
profession - Societys view of ethical behavior in the
context of a course of action changes over time. - Ethical behavior may vary with individuals,
ethnic groups and countries.
15Some History
- Nuremberg Code (1947) Set of standards for
judging physicians and scientists who had
conducted biomedical experiments on concentration
camp prisoners. - Helsinki Declaration (1964, 1975 rev).
- Various Guidelines issued by HHS (latest revision
1991). - FDA Guidelines (similar to HHS, revised 2000).
- Uniform Federal Policy for protection of human
subjects was adopted by 16 Federal departments
and agencies. - Guidelines for human investigations have been
issued by many medical societies and hospitals.
16Nuremberg Code
- Formulated in 1947 in Nuremberg, Germany by
American judges sitting in judgment of Nazi
doctors accused of conducting murderous and
torturous human experiments in the concentration
camps. Examples - Approximately 200 internees placed in vacuum
chamber - 40 died-anoxia, ruptured lungs.
- Approximately 300 internees immersed for hours in
tubs of ice water, others fed nothing but salt
water for days others outside, in sub-freezing
weather 30 died. - Experiments involving battlefield
medicine-deliberate gunshot wounds, amputations,
chemical and biological exposures, etc.
17The Nuremberg Code (1)Some Principles
- Voluntary consent
- Experiments yield results for good of society
- Experiments based on animal experiments and
knowledge of natural history of disease - Avoid all unnecessary physical, mental suffering
and injury - No experiment if a prior reason to believe that
death or disabling injury will occur
18The Nuremberg Code (2) Some Principles
- Degree of risk should never exceed humanitarian
importance of problem to be solved. - Protect subject against remote possibility of
injury. - Experiments conducted only by scientifically-quali
fied persons - Human subject should be at liberty to bring
experiment to an end. - Scientist in charge must be prepared to terminate
experiment if probable cause that continuation of
experiment is likely to cause injury, disability
or death.
19The Declaration of Helsinki(1964,2000)
- Many of the Nurenberg Principles became
formalized in the Helsinki Declaration in 1964 - Declaration has been modified or updated
- Most recent modification addresses use of placebo
controls when a proven therapy exists
20Belmont Report (1979)Ethical Principles
GuidelinesSponsored by NIH
- Respect for Persons
- Persons with diminished autonomy are entitled to
protection (e.g. children, prisoners) - Beneficence
- Maximize possible benefits and minimize possible
harm. - Justice
- Fairness in distribution access to experimental
treatment
21Code of Federal Regulations (HHS)Design Issues
- Risks to subject are minimized by using
procedures which are consistent with sound
research design and which do not necessarily
expose subjects to risk. - Research plan makes adequate provision for
monitoring data collected to insure safety of
subject - Adequate provisions to protect the privacy of
subjects and to maintain confidentiality of
data, new HIPAA rules - Ref. 45CFR46 par. 111
22Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
- Responsible for approval of new drugs, biologics
and devices - The FDA has different regulations which apply to
products regulated by FDA. - In spirit they are the same as the HHS
regulations with regard to scientific issues
23Federal RegulationsProtection of Human Subjects
- The Office for Protection of Research Risks
(OPRR), now Office of Human Research Protection
(OHRP) in HHS ultimate authority - Issues, requirements and policies
- Reviews, IRBs for compliance
- May shut down research at an institution for
non-compliance
24Institutional Review Boards (IRB)
- Required for each research institution by Federal
regulations - Must review each new protocol for
- Merit and ethics
- Consent process/document
- Must conduct annual review
- Responsible for patient safety
25Ethical IssuesInforming the Patients (1)
- One principle is that patients must be properly
informed and consent to trial - Must be written as well as oral
- (if possible)
- Consent document should be clear and
straightforward
26Ethical IssuesInforming the Patients (2)
- Should newly diagnosed patients be entered in
Phase II Trials if therapies are available with
proven beneficial effects? - If a physician is receiving funds on a per
patient basis, should the patient be informed? - If a patient is participating in a clinical trial
and a treatment is found to be superior, should
the patient be informed prior to publication or
presentation of the results? - If a patient is participating in a double blind
trial and wishes to know the identity of the
treatment, should the patient be informed?
27Recent Developments (1)
- Shelby Amendment (1998)
- Requires federally funded researchers to make
available raw data that support results used by
the federal government in developing policy or
rules. - - May require full document of data.
- - Possibility of researchers being scooped.
- - May generate many secondary analyses.
- - Privacy of medical records cannot be
guaranteed. - - Consent forms may warn that privacy
cannot be guaranteed.
28Recent Developments (2)
- U.S. National Bioethics Advisory Commission
- Recent recommendations for research abroad should
provide established, effective treatment to all
study participants whether or not it would
usually be available. - Exception is made if providing treatment would
render study irrelevant in host country - Pre-study requirement --- How will treatments
that prove successful be made available to
research participants and to the country as a
whole?
29Recent Developments (3)
- World Medical Association
- Revision of 1964 Declaration of Helsinki (Oct,
00) - Placebos may be used in a clinical trial when no
other therapies are available for comparison with
experimental treatment. - New therapies should be tested against best
current treatment. - Suggests investigators divulge to patient how
trial is funded and possible conflicts of
interest. - All study results whether positive or negative
should be published.
30Monitoring of Clinical Trials
- Shalala
- NEJM (2000)
- Press Release (2000)
- IRBs often not provided sufficient information to
evaluate clinical trials fully - NIH will require monitoring plans for Phase I, II
and III trials - FDA will issue guidelines for Data Safety
Monitoring Boards and IRBs
31Ethical Omniscience
- EXAMPLE The AIDS Clinical Trials Group study on
sero-positive pregnant women and their infants. - (15-30 of infants become sero-positive)
- Parents may consent on behalf of their children
Sero-Positive Pregnant Women And Infant
R A N D
AZT Placebo
- Requires consent from both mother and father (if
available)
32Ethical Imperialism
- Imposition on one society of solutions
culturally appropriate to another society on the
pretext that they represent cultural absolutes. - - Gilks and Ware
- - NEJM (1990)
- Discussion motivated by Western countries
carrying out studies in developing countries.
Tacit agreement is that sponsor of research has
the authority to demand that their ethics be
imposed.
33Ethical OmniscienceMedical Journal Policies
- Journal will not publish reports of unethical
research regardless of scientific meritthe
approval of the IRB (when there is one) and the
informed consent of the research subjects are
necessary but not sufficient conditions. - - New England Journal of Medicine
- An editor who vetoes decisions reached by local
review boards is in the precarious position of
claiming to have insight into ethical matters
that is superior to that of all others and so to
be justified is unilaterally rejecting decisions
made by duly constituted review boards. - - Greene (NEJM)
34Institutional Review Boards ( IRBs)
- Review all protocols for ethical aspects and
informal consent - May provide limited scientific review
- Design
- Population studied
- Adequacy of sample size
- Must review each protocol progress annually
- Responsible for monitoring patient safety
35Informed Consent Process
- Effective informal consent must be obtained from
subject or their legally authorized
representative - Investigator may exert no coercion
- Information must be understandable
36Basic Contents/Informal Consent (1)
- Explanation of research study
- Purpose
- Duration
- Procedures
- Possible risks
- Possible benefits
- Patient
- Other individuals
- Disclosure of alternative treatment
37Basic Contents/Informal Consent (2)
- Describe confidentiality of data
- Compensation in case of injury
- Patient contacts for questions or injury
- Participation is voluntary
38Additional Possible Elements/Informal Consent
- Risks to fetus
- Investigator may terminate patient participation
- Costs of additional tests
- Consequences of patient withdrawal
- Sharing of new findings during course of trial
- Total number of subjects
39Consent Waiver
- Approval by local government
- No other way to carry out research
- Research involves no more than minimal risk
- Waiver does not adversely affect subject
rights/welfare
40New Federal Regulations
- Health Information Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA)
41National Health Information Infrastructure (NHII)
Task Force Issues
- Lack of Standards
- prevents interoperability and sharing of data
- Lack of Incentives
- value of collecting data electronically not
appreciated at the point of care - Insufficient Funding
- of projects that lead to improved health care
delivery using measures of better quality,
improved patient safety and reduced costs based
on evidence. - Privacy concerns
- security and confidentiality
- SO NEED FOR STANDARDS IMPLIES A NEED FOR PRIVACY
AND SECURITY - BUT CONGRESS DID NOT ACT SOON ENOUGH
42HIPAA Motivation
- Increased risk to patient privacy
- A University has 4000 patient records hacked
- 400 organ donors have identity released to
recipients - Health care across state lines need for
standardization - Avoid employer insurance discrimination
43HIPAA
- Privacy Final Form August 2002
- Notice of Privacy Practices by April 15, 2003
- Security Final Form February 2003
- In effect by April of 2004
- DEVIL IS IN THE DETAILS
- It may be years before we really understand what
this means
44HIPAA Requires
- Work force training
- Patient Notification
- Access to data on a need to know or a need to
use basis - Limit research data to what is needed (NOT A BAD
IDEA) - Upgrade data security (A GROWING ISSUE)
45Federal Involvement
- Federal Government now involved in Health
Information Standards - Simultaneously
- National Health Information Infrastructure (NHII)
Sponsoring thoughtful deliberation - Consolidated Health Informatics (CHI) Moving in
like a bull and just doing it WITH NO PUBLIC
PARTICIPATION
46Public Health Information (PHI)
- Data, in any form, created, received, and/or held
by a Covered Entity and - relates to physical or mental health, provision
of care or payment and - identifies individual or can be used to identify
individual - does NOT include blood and tissue specimens, but
information associated with them is PHI
47HIPAA Transition
- Protocols completed prior to 4/14/03 were
grandfathered - Protocols continuing past 4/14/03 had to receive
new IRB review of patient authorization - All protocols started after 4/14/03 have to meet
one of the HIPAA Privacy Rules options
48HIPAA Privacy Rule Options
- Obtain written patient authorization
- Separate document
- Part of Informed Consent document
- Apply to IRB for a waiver
- Develop a Limited Data Set
- Develop statistical argument of low risk
identification
49Obtaining Subject Authorization
- A description of PHI to be used and disclosed
- Identification of individuals who will
use/disclose PHI - Identification of individuals who will receive
PHI - Purpose of disclosure
- An expiration date or notice of no expiration
- Statement of individuals right to revoke at any
time, but that PHI gathered prior to revocation
may be used to maintain integrity of the study - Signature and date/copy provided
50Waiver of Written Authorization
- Research on existing database with no contact
information - IRB must determine
- 1) No more than minimal privacy risk
- a) Improper use plan
- b) Plan to destroy identifiers
- c) Written assurances that PHI not to be
- disclosed to third party (except as law
requires) - 2) Research cannot practically be done without
- waiver and without access to and use of PHI
51Issues
- Authorization Do patients/subjects really
understand Authorization form any more than they
understand the Informed Consent? - Waivers Easier/safer to say no than yes
- LDUs Burden may be on recipient but would not
want to count on no risk - Statistical Assurance Are you kidding!
52Data sharing Key point
- The usual end result of scientific research in a
journal - Journals publish summary statistics
- Future researchers may want to analyze data in
different ways - This can only be achieved by access to raw data
53Three rationales for data sharing
- The scientific value of data can be maximized by
reanalysis and meta-analysis - Data obtained with public funds should be shared
for the public good - All data sets build on prior science and should
therefore be made available to optimize future
science
54Data Sharing Problems
- Arguments are logical but this is not a logical
arena - Not all clinical trial data paid by public funds
- Patients are suspicious
- IRBS are uptight
- Investigators are uptight
- Data security is getting harder
- (i.e Hackers)
55Definition Clinical Trial
- A clinical trial is an experiment on humans for
the purpose of evaluating one or more potentially
beneficial therapies where the investigator has
control of some features of the trial.
56Single Double Blind Clinical Trial
- Single Blind A clinical trial where the
participant/patient does not know the identity of
the treatment received - Double Blind A clinical trial in which neither
the patient nor the treating physician knows the
identity of the treatment being administered.
57Placebo Control Clinical Trial
- Placebo An inert substance made up to
physically resemble a treatment being
investigated for therapeutic benefit. - Used as a control treatment.
- Design may be
- 1) treatment vs placebo or
- 2) Best standard of care plus either experimental
treatment or a matching placebo
58Types of Clinical Trials
- Phase I
- New treatment (usually drugs) is to be tried on
humans for the first time. Aim is to find
acceptable range of doses and schedules. - Phase II
- Treatment is to be given to humans to determine
if it has any beneficial activity. Doses and
schedules may not be optimum. - Phase III
- Comparative Trial. To compare experimental or new
therapies with standard therapy or competitive
therapies.
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60Types of Clinical Trials
- Randomized
- Non-Randomized
- Single Center
- Multi Center
- Phase I, II, III Trials
61Characterization of TrialsRandomized vs.
Non-RandomizedMulti-Center vs. Single Center
Carrying out a multi-center randomized clinical
trial is the most difficult way to generate
scientific information.
62Why Are Clinical Trials Needed? (1)
- 1. Most definitive method of determining whether
a treatment is effective. - Other designs have more potential biases
- One cannot determine on the basis of uncontrolled
observation whether an intervention has made a
difference to outcome.
63Observational Studies
- Issue - Correlation vs. Causation
- Examples of False Positives
- 1. High cholesterol diet and rectal cancer
- 2. Smoking and breast cancer
- 3. Vasectomy and prostate cancer
- 4. Red meat and colon cancer
- 5. Red meat and breast cancer
- 6. Drinking water frequently and bladder cancer
- 7. Not consuming olive oil and breast cancer
- Replication of Observational Studies
- E.g. smoking and lung cancer
- May not overcome confounding and bias
- Beta-carotene
64Why Are Clinical Trials Needed? (2)
- 2. Determine incidence of side effects and
complications. - Example Coronary Drug Project
- A. Detection of side effect (Cardiac
Arrhythmias) - Clofibrate 33.3
- Niacin 32.7 pgt.05
- Placebo 38.2
- B. Natural occurring side effects (nausea)
- Clofibrate 7.6
- Placebo 6.2
65Why Are Clinical Trials Needed? (3)
- 3. Therapy accepted with no trial! Later,
- IPPB Trial ? no benefit
- Retrolental Fibroplasia, high O2 in premature
infants ? Harmful - Tonsillectomy ? Reduced use
- Bypass Surgery ? Restricted use
66Failure to Use Therapy Based on Theory
67Chronic Heart Failure
- Not many good therapies in 1980s
- Beta blockers known to be effective in post MI
patient care - Reduces mortality
- Lowers blood pressure
- Slows and regulates heart rate
- Proscribed for heart failure patients
68Beta-Blocker HFTrial Features
- Class II-IV heart failure
- Low ejection fraction
- Beta-blocker vs. placebo
- Randomized double blind
- Several thousand patients
69MERIT
Total Mortality
70CIBIS-II
Lancet, 1999
71COPERNICUS
NEJM, 2001
72- Long Standing Treatment
- Based on Theory and
- Observation/Association
73 Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
- Hypothesis that HRT reduced coronary heart
disease - Supportive data
- Lipid lowering
- Non-human primate studies
- Observational studies
74Observational Studies
- Example Refs
- Stampfer Coldiz (Prev Med 1991)
- Nurses Health Study
- Grady (Ann Int Med 1992)
- Cauley, Cummings, et al. (Am J OB/GYN, 1990)
- Grodstein, Stempfer, Manson (NEJM 1996)
- Suggest 40-50 reduction in CHD risk
75HRT POPULAR
- 1/3 of post-menopausal women use HRT
- Second most prescribed drugs
- Year 2000, 46 million prescriptions for Premarin
(Estrogen) - 1 billion in sales
- 22 million prescriptions for PremPro (EP)
76HORMONE REPLACEMENT THERAPY FOR POSTMENOPAUSAL
WOMEN
- Secondary Prevention
- HERS Hully S, Grady D, Bush T, Furberg C,
Herrington D, Riggs B, Vittinghoff E for the
HERS Research Group Randomized trial of estrogen
plus progestin for secondary prevention of
coronary heart disease in postmenopausal women.
JAMA 28(7)605-13, 1998. - Primary Prevention
- WHI Writing Group for the Womens Health
Initiative Investigators Risks and benefits of
estrogen plus progestin in healthy postmenopausal
women. Principal results from the Womens Health
Initiative Randomized Controlled trial.
JAMA 288321-333, 2002.
77HORMONE REPLACEMENT THERAPY FOR POSTMENOPAUSAL
WOMEN
- Secondary Prevention
- HERS Hully S, Grady D, Bush T, Furberg C,
Herrington D, Riggs B, Vittinghoff E for the
HERS Research Group Randomized trial of estrogen
plus progestin for secondary prevention of
coronary heart disease in postmenopausal women.
JAMA 28(7)605-13, 1998. - Primary Prevention
- WHI Writing Group for the Womens Health
Initiative Investigators Risks and benefits of
estrogen plus progestin in healthy postmenopausal
women. Principal results from the Womens Health
Initiative Randomized Controlled trial.
JAMA 288321-333, 2002.
78HERS JAMA 28(7)605-13, 1998
- Postmenopausal women
- Secondary prevention, patients had documented
cardiovascular disease - Estrogen-progestin vs. placebo
- Randomized double blind
- Outcomes
- CVD mortality
- Fractures
79HERS
- Observed early clotting problems
- DVTs
- PEs
- Fracture trend for benefit
- Early negative trend in mortality that reverses
to neutrality (non-definitive)
80HERS MORTALITY
JAMA, 1998
81HERS IMPACT
- Many believed results only applied in secondary
prevention - Many interpreted trend reversal as suggesting
benefit if longer follow-up - No perceptible impact on HRT use since HRT has
other benefits
82WOMENS HEALTH INITIATIVEJAMA 288(3)321-33, 2002
- A large factorial trial evaluating HRT, low fat
diet and calcium - Multiple outcomes for each treatment
- For HRT
- Coronary heart disease (MI CHD death)
- Invasive breast cancer
- Global index
- Fractures
83WHI
373,092 Women Initiated Screening
18,845 Provided Consent Reported No Hysterectomy
8506 Assigned to Receive Estrogen Progestin
8102 Assigned to Receive Placebo
- Status on April 30, 2002
- Alive Outcomes Data
- Submitted in Last 18 Months
- Unknown Vital Status
- 231 Deceased
Status on April 30, 2002 7608 Alive Outcomes
Data Submitted in Last 18 Months 276
Unknown Vital Status 218 Deceased
84WHI
Cumulative Dropout and Drop-in Rates by
Randomization Assignment and Follow-up Duration
JAMA, 2002
85Wisconsin State Journal 2002
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87WHI
Kaplan-Meier Estimates of Cumulative Hazards for
Selected Clinical Outcomes
JAMA, 2002
88WHI
Kaplan-Meier Estimates of Cumulative Hazards for
Global Index and Death
JAMA, 2002
89WHI
Kaplan-Meier Estimates of Cumulative Hazards for
Selected Clinical Outcomes
JAMA, 2002
90WHI
Kaplan-Meier Estimates of Cumulative Hazards for
Selected Clinical Outcomes
JAMA, 2002
91HRT Low But Increased Risk
- Rate HR
- Outcome HRT PLBO
- CHD .37 .30 1.29
- Stroke .29 .21 1.41
- DVT .26 .13 2.07
- PE .16 .08 2.13
- Breast CA .38 .30 1.26
- Death .52 .53 .98
92Ann of Int Med 137(4), 2002
93Evidence Based Medicine
- For important questions with serious
mortality/morbidity, need RCTs - If RCTs not possible, need to be cautious
vigilant about Treatments only based on
observation/association or theory
94When Should a Clinical Trial Be Started?(1)
- 1. Intervention (knowledge about it)
- Safety
- Correct dose/duration
- Final form (TPA story)
- Defining study population (PHS)
- Obsolescence
- 2. Trial Design
- What outcomes to assess
- Ability to measure
- Expected effect of intervention
- 3. Feasible
- Resources
- Financial
- Staff
- Equipment/technology
- Time
- Availability of subjects
95When Should a Clinical Trial Be Started?(2)
- 4. Narrow window in time
- If done too soon, trial may not be relevant to
eventual practice or may be a disaster
operationally. - e.g. VA Bypass Trial (early op deaths)
- If done too late, intervention may become
accepted practice before being properly tested. - e.g. Bypass Surgery
- -VA Trial
- -NIH CASS
- PTCA
- -NIH BARI
- -PTCA vs. Bypass
96Trial
97NHLBI Clinical Trial Model
Policy Advisory Board
Funding Agency
Data Monitoring Committee
Steering Committee
Central Lab(s)
Working Committees
Data Center
Clinics
Greenberg Report. Controlled Clinical Trials,
137-148, 1988
98NIH Organizational StructureA Brief Overview (1)
- 1. Project Office/Funding Agency
- Responsible for providing organizational,
scientific statistical direction through
Project Officer - Contract Officer is responsible for all
administrative matters related to award and
conduct of contracts - Responsible for most of the pre-award
development RFP, sample size, etc. - 2. Policy Advisory Board (PAB) Data Monitoring
Board (DMB) - Acts as senior independent advisory board to NIH
on policy matters - Reviews study design and changes to the initial
design - Reviews interim study results, by treatment group
and recommends early termination for toxicity or
beneficial effects - Reviews performance of individual clinical centers
99NIH Organizational StructureA Brief Overview (2)
- 3. Steering Committee
- Provides scientific direction for the study at
the operational level - Usually are recommended or elected
representatives of the clinical center principle
investigators - Monitors performance of individual centers
- Report major problems to PAB and P.O.
- May have several subcommittees which are
responsible for various aspects such as
recruitment, endpoints, publications, quality
control, etc. - 4. Assembly of Investigators (may be same as
Steering Committee) - Each operational unit (clinic, laboratory, data
center) has a representative - Elects from its membership representative on
Steering Committee - Reviews operational progress of study
- Represents individual clinical centers
100NIH Organizational StructureA Brief Overview (3)
- 5. Coordinating Center
- Responsible for collecting, editing, analyzing
storing all data collected - Develop and test forms
- Develop randomization procedure
- Monitor quality control of clinics and labs
- Periodic analysis for potential risks and
benefits - Perform final analysis at end of the trial
- 6. Central Labs
- Provide standardized results across centers to
insure comparability - Examples are EKG, Biochemistry, Pathology
- 7. Clinical Centers
- Recruit patients, administer treatment,
coordinate patient care collect data required - Grass Roots of any clinical trial
101A Trial Protocol
- Required for all trials
- Basis of Review
- IRB/Ethics
- Funding
102Purposes of a Protocol
- To assist the investigator in thinking through
the research. - To insure that both patient and study management
are considered at the planning stage. - To provide a sounding board for external
comments. - To orient the staff for the preparation of forms
and data processing procedures. - To guide the treatment of the patient on the
study. - To provide a document which can be used by other
investigators who wish to confirm the results
or use the treatment in practice. - Reference Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Outline
to Writing a Protocol
103Protocol Outline A Blueprint (1)
- A. Background Rationale
- B. Objectives
- 1. Primary Question
-
- 2. Secondary Question
-
- 3. Subgroup Questions
-
- 4. Toxicities
104Protocol Outline A Blueprint (2)
- C. Design
- 1. Population
- -Inclusion criteria
- -Exclusion criteria
- 2. Sample Size Rationale
- 3. Enrollment
- -Recruitment strategy
- -Informed consent
- -Eligibility assessment
- -Baseline exam
- 4. Randomization
- 5. Intervention
- 6. Follow-up Schedule
105Protocol Outline A Blueprint (3)
- D. Data Monitoring
- 1. Quality Control
- 2. Recruitment
- 3. Benefit/Risk
- 4. Early Termination
- E. Data Analysis/ Reporting
- F. Organization
- 1. Investigators
- 2. Committees
106Protocol Outline A Blueprint (4)
- Appendix
- Definitions
- Combined Outcomes
- Examples
- fatal or non fatal MI
- CHD or stroke
- ARC or AIDS or Death
107Manual of Operations
- Describes in detail how to implement the
protocol at the clinic, laboratories, and
Coordinating Center - Generally includes
- 1. Design portion of protocol,
- possibly in more detail
- 2. Definitions of criteria
- 3. Standardization of procedures
- Laboratory (chemical or mechanical)
- Equipment
- Clinical
- 4. Forms and instructions for completion