PURPOSE: To examine the ethical, scientific, and regulatory issues in the design and conduct of placebo-controlled cancer clinical trials. METHODS: Several content experts contributed to this article. RESULTS: Specific criteria can be applied to determine the appropriate use of placebos in oncology drug development. Placebo controls may be justified to prove efficacy of a new treatment in diseases with high placebo response rates; in conditions that wax and wane in severity, have spontaneous remissions, or have an uncertain and unpredictable course; when existing therapies are minimally effective or have serious adverse effects; or in the absence of effective therapy. Use of placebos may also be justified to assure blinding of physicians and patients regarding treatment assignment so as to minimize bias in assessment of study end points. If a trial meets these methodologic criteria, it must then fulfill additional criteria to be considered ethical. These criteria include full disclosure to patients and an assurance that participants randomly assigned to placebo are not substantially more likely than those in active treatment group(s) to die; suffer irreversible morbidity, disability, or other substantial harms; suffer reversible but serious harm; or suffer severe discomfort. CONCLUSION: We conclude that placebo-controlled oncology trials are scientifically feasible, ethically justifiable, and may be necessary or desirable to meet regulatory standards for drug approval. Using cross-over or randomized withdrawal trial designs, requiring inclusion of state-of-the-art palliative care, and developing valid and acceptable surrogates for survival are critical strategies to address some of the ethical dilemmas associated with placebo-controlled trials.
RCT Entities:
PURPOSE: To examine the ethical, scientific, and regulatory issues in the design and conduct of placebo-controlled cancer clinical trials. METHODS: Several content experts contributed to this article. RESULTS: Specific criteria can be applied to determine the appropriate use of placebos in oncology drug development. Placebo controls may be justified to prove efficacy of a new treatment in diseases with high placebo response rates; in conditions that wax and wane in severity, have spontaneous remissions, or have an uncertain and unpredictable course; when existing therapies are minimally effective or have serious adverse effects; or in the absence of effective therapy. Use of placebos may also be justified to assure blinding of physicians and patients regarding treatment assignment so as to minimize bias in assessment of study end points. If a trial meets these methodologic criteria, it must then fulfill additional criteria to be considered ethical. These criteria include full disclosure to patients and an assurance that participants randomly assigned to placebo are not substantially more likely than those in active treatment group(s) to die; suffer irreversible morbidity, disability, or other substantial harms; suffer reversible but serious harm; or suffer severe discomfort. CONCLUSION: We conclude that placebo-controlled oncology trials are scientifically feasible, ethically justifiable, and may be necessary or desirable to meet regulatory standards for drug approval. Using cross-over or randomized withdrawal trial designs, requiring inclusion of state-of-the-art palliative care, and developing valid and acceptable surrogates for survival are critical strategies to address some of the ethical dilemmas associated with placebo-controlled trials.
Authors: Seunghoon Lee; Ui Min Jerng; Yan Liu; Jung Won Kang; Dongwoo Nam; Jae-dong Lee Journal: Support Care Cancer Date: 2014-03-08 Impact factor: 3.603
Authors: Ann H Partridge; Karen Sepucha; Anne O'Neill; Kathy D Miller; Christine Motley; Ramona F Swaby; Bryan P Schneider; Chau T Dang; Donald W Northfelt; George W Sledge Journal: JAMA Oncol Date: 2015-06 Impact factor: 31.777
Authors: R Page; P Baneux; D Vail; L Duda; P Olson; L Anestidou; N Dybdal; G Golab; W Shelton; M Salgaller; C Hardy Journal: J Vet Intern Med Date: 2016-03-07 Impact factor: 3.333