Randomised Control Trial, Analysis And Interpretation Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of number needed to treat

A

No of patients who need to receive treatment in order to prevent AE in 1 patient

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2
Q

Definition of patient years

A

Total no of years that each participant contributed

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3
Q

Definition of internal validity

A

Lack of bias

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4
Q

Definition of external validity/generalisability

A

Whether the subjects are typical of patients normally seen

Whether treatment is typical of treatment delivered in most practises

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5
Q

Definition of explanatory trial

A

Tests efficacy

Can the intervention work under ideal conditions

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6
Q

Definition of pragmatic trial

A

Tests effectiveness

Does the intervention work in normal clinical practise

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7
Q

How do you calculate absolute risk reduction

How do you calculate relative risk reduction

A

ARR=Outcome in control - outcome in intervention

RRR=Outcome in control-outcome in intervention/outcome in control

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8
Q

How would you calculate number needed to treat (NNT)

A

NNT=1/ARR (when using percentages)
No of patients that need to receive treatment in order to prevent AE in 1 patient

If using patient years
NNT=patient years/ARR

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9
Q

What is the intention to treat

A

All randomised individuals included in analysis according to allocated treatment
This is regardless of drop outs/non compliance/loss in follow ups

Reduces ecological fallacy
Maintains balance between groups

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10
Q

Before a trial starts, who must approve of the trial

What info must be shared with the participants
What info must the participants give

What 2 independent oversight groups assess the conduct of the trial
What can they do

A

Ethics committee must approve

Informed consent must be obtained from participants

  • Explain purpose and uncertainty
  • Randomisation
  • Alternative treatments
  • May withdraw at any time

Trial steering committee
-ensures proper trial conduct

Data monitoring committee

  • monitors safety analysis
  • monitors data to see if intervention is safe
  • If intervention found to be harmful prematurely => trial ends
  • If intervention found to be beneficial prematurely => trial ends and control group also gets access to intervention
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11
Q

How is internal validity achieved

  • Allocation of participants to trial arms
  • trial performance
  • outcome assessment
  • method for analysis
  • reporting bias
A

Allocation of participants to trial arms

  • Randomisation
  • Allocation concealment

Trial performance
-personnel blinding

Outcome assessment
-blinding

Method for analysis
-ITT

Reporting bias

  • Publication of protocol
  • report prespecified outcomes so all data is reported
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12
Q

What is external validity and generalisability

A

Whether the subjects are typical of patients usually seen

If treatment is typical of treatment delivered in most practices

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13
Q

What is the difference between explanatory and pragmatic trials

A

Explanatory
-tests efficacy, whether intervention works under ideal conditions

Pragmatic
-tests effectiveness, if intervention works in normal clinical practice

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