Title: Date Article Title Citation
1DateArticle TitleCitation
- Resident Name
- Faculty Name
2Background
- Type of Study
- Question being addressed Not the study
hypothesis, but the issue that lead to the study
being done. - Clinical Context the information that goes into
the introduction section of the article
3Framwork Overview MAARIE
- Method
- Assignment
- Assessment
- Results
- Interpretation
- Extrapolation
4Method Null Hypothesis
- Study hypothesis What is the study question?
- What type of investigation will be used to
address this hypothesis?
5Method Population
- Study population What are the inclusion and
exclusion criteria, or how was the study
population chosen? - How were controls chosen (if applicable)?
- Were the study group and the control group
similar at baseline?
6Method Sample Size and Power
- Sample size and statistical power How many
subjects are there? Are the numbers sufficient to
demonstrate statistical significance if the
hypothesis is true? - Was a power analysis performed to determine the
enrollment goal of the study?
7Assignment
- How were participants assigned to study and
control arms of the experiment?
8Assignment Questions
- 1. Process of assignment What method is used to
identify and assign individuals to study and
control groups? - 2. Confounding Variables Are there differences
between the study and control groups, other than
the characteristic being studied, which may
affect outcomes? - 3. Masking or blinding methods
9Assessment
- Measurements of outcomes or endpoints in the
study and control groups - Does the measurement of an outcome address the
study question? - Is the measurement of an outcome an accurate and
precise measure of the phenomenon that the
investigation seeks to measure?
10Assessment, continued
- Thoroughness and Biases of Assessment
- How efficient was follow-up?
- Why were subjects lost to follow-up?
- Are the incomplete data likely to influence the
data in support, or against support, of the study
hypothesis? - Was the completeness of follow-up affected by the
participant or investigators knowledge of study
vs. control group assignments?
11Results
- What are the outcomes in the study group?
- What are the outcomes in the control group?
- How do they compare?
12Results Key Questions
- 1. Estimation What is the magnitude or strength
of the association observed between an outcome
and an exposure? - 2. Inference What statistical techniques are
used for statistical significance testing? - 3. Adjustment What techniques have been used to
control for differences between study groups and
control groups, if any?
13Interpretation
- Does the factor under study alter the probability
of the outcome of interest? - Are there harms associated with the intervention?
- Are outcomes observed in subgroups of the study
population different from outcomes observed in
the overall study?
14Extrapolation
- Do the investigators extend the conclusions of
the study to a population similar to the study
population? Is this warranted? - Do the investigators extrapolate their findings
beyond the scope of their data? - Can the results be applied to our patient
population (or a subset of our patients)?
15Applying MAARIE to case-control studies
- Method case-control
- Assignment The study group have had the outcome
of interest the controls are otherwise similar
subjects who have not had the outcome of interest.
- Assessment Determination of whether cases and
controls have had the same exposure history
preceding the development of the outcome of
interest in the study group.
16MAARIE for case-control study
- The previous presence or absence of a risk factor
or exposure of interest in the study group
compared to the control group is the outcome.
Since the outcome has already occurred,
independently of the investigation, the
allocation to study and control groups is
pre-defined. This assignment is called observed
assignment.
17Case-control Results
- Calculation of the chance that the study
population had the exposure of interest, compared
to the chance that the control population had the
exposure of interest. - Presented as an odds ratio using discordant pairs.
18Case-Control Interpretation and Extrapolation
- What conclusions can be drawn with respect to the
differential effects of exposures of interest in
the populations of the cases and controls? - Can these conclusions be extended to categories
of subjects or types of risk exposure different
from those in the present study?
19MAARIE for a Cohort Study
- The cohort study design differs from the
case-control study design in that the
identification of individuals for study and
control groups is made before the investigator
knows which subjects have developed the disease
of interest. The cohort is a group of subjects
who share a similar environment.
20Cohort Methodology
- The investigational cohort possesses
characteristics (occupational, environmental,
geographic, etc.) which are hypothesized to
contribute to disease pathogenesis.
- The control cohort is similar to the
investigational cohort, except with respect to
the exposures of interest.
21Cohort Study Design, MAARIE
- Assignment A group with the circumstance of
interest is selected as the study cohort. A
similar group, except in the circumstance of
scientific interest, serves as the control cohort.
- Assessment Who in the study group, and who in
the control group, develops the prospectively
defined outcome?
22Cohort Study Design MAARIE
- Results The chance of developing the endpoint in
the study cohort is compared with the chance of
developing th endpoint in the control cohort.
- Interpretation What are the implications of the
incidence of the endpoint in the two cohorts? - Extrapolation Can the same conclusions be
extended to a broader group of subjects, such as
our patients?
23Randomized Clinical Trial
- Method assign individuals to a study or control
group in random order - Assignment randomized, prospective distribution
to the control or to the intervention arm - Assessment observe which of the subjects sustain
the outcome.
24Randomized Clinical Trial
- Result calculate the chance of the outcome for
each group (study subjects and control subjects). - Interpret how the intervention influenced the
incidence of the outcome. - Extrapolate whether the inference between
intervention and outcome can be extended to
subjects who differ from the population enrolled
in the trial.
25Compare and Contrast Study Designs
- 1. Case-Control
- 2. Cohort Study
- 3. Randomized Clinical Trial
26Case-Control Design
- Useful for study of a rare disorder
- Fast, as outcome has already developed
- Multiple hypotheses can be tested at once (diet,
drugs, lifestyle, family history)
- Cannot establish causation
- Subject to the bias of the investigator in
selection of the controls and the features
analyzed
27Cohort Study
- Stronger cause-and-effect evidence, as the
outcome has not occurred at the time of the
assigment - Multiple outcomes can be followed in one cohort
(MI, CVA, Heart Failure, Renal Failure)
- Can be expensive and time consuming, depending on
size of cohort, length of time it is observed,
and depth of investigation
28Randomized Clinical Trials
- Randomization helps to assure that the study
intervention, not an underlying disposition,
causes the outcome of interest. - Critical for interventions to prevent, treat, or
palliate disease
- Capable of establishing efficacy of an
intervention - Expensive
- Require Consent
- Require subjects to take risks