| Literature DB >> 20053272 |
Lehana Thabane1, Jinhui Ma, Rong Chu, Ji Cheng, Afisi Ismaila, Lorena P Rios, Reid Robson, Marroon Thabane, Lora Giangregorio, Charles H Goldsmith.
Abstract
Pilot studies for phase III trials - which are comparative randomized trials designed to provide preliminary evidence on the clinical efficacy of a drug or intervention - are routinely performed in many clinical areas. Also commonly know as "feasibility" or "vanguard" studies, they are designed to assess the safety of treatment or interventions; to assess recruitment potential; to assess the feasibility of international collaboration or coordination for multicentre trials; to increase clinical experience with the study medication or intervention for the phase III trials. They are the best way to assess feasibility of a large, expensive full-scale study, and in fact are an almost essential pre-requisite. Conducting a pilot prior to the main study can enhance the likelihood of success of the main study and potentially help to avoid doomed main studies. The objective of this paper is to provide a detailed examination of the key aspects of pilot studies for phase III trials including: 1) the general reasons for conducting a pilot study; 2) the relationships between pilot studies, proof-of-concept studies, and adaptive designs; 3) the challenges of and misconceptions about pilot studies; 4) the criteria for evaluating the success of a pilot study; 5) frequently asked questions about pilot studies; 7) some ethical aspects related to pilot studies; and 8) some suggestions on how to report the results of pilot investigations using the CONSORT format.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20053272 PMCID: PMC2824145 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-10-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Some Adapted Definitions of Pilot Studies on the Web (Date of last access: December 22, 2009)
| Definition* | Source |
|---|---|
| A trial study carried out before a research design is finalised | |
| A smaller version of a study is carried out before the actual investigation is done. Researchers use information gathered in pilot studies | |
| A small scale study conducted to test the plan and method of a research study. | |
| A small study | |
| An experimental use of a treatment in a small group of patients | |
| The | |
| A small study often done | |
| Small, preliminary test or trial run of an intervention, or of an evaluation activity such as an instrument or sampling procedure. The results of the pilot are | |
*Emphasis is ours
Reasons for conducting pilot studies
| Main Reason | Examples |
|---|---|
| • Recruitment rates | |
| • Retention rates | |
| • Refusal rates | |
| • Failure/success rates | |
| • (Non)compliance or adherence rates | |
| • eligibility criteria | |
| - Is it obvious who meets and who does not meet the eligibility requirements? | |
| - Are the eligibility criteria sufficient or too restrictive? | |
| • Understanding of study questionnaires or data collection tools: | |
| - Do subjects provide no answer, multiple answers, qualified answers, or unanticipated answers to study questions? | |
| • Length of time to fill out all the study forms | |
| • Determining capacity: | |
| - Will the study participants overload your phone lines or overflow your waiting room? | |
| • Determining process time | |
| - How much time does it take to mail out a thousand surveys? | |
| • Is the equipment readily available when and where it is needed? | |
| • What happens when it breaks down or gets stolen? | |
| • Can the software used for capturing data read and understand the data? | |
| • Determining centre willingness and capacity | |
| - Do the centres do what they committed to doing? | |
| - Do investigators have the time to Perform the tasks they committed to doing? | |
| - Are there any capacity issues at each participating centre? | |
| • What are the challenges that participating centres have with managing the study? | |
| • What challenges do study personnel have? | |
| • Is there enough room on the data collection form for all of the data you receive? | |
| • Are there any problems entering data into the computer? | |
| • Can data coming from different sources be matched? | |
| • Were any important data values forgotten about? | |
| • Do data show too much or too little variability? | |
| • Is it safe to use the study drug/intervention? | |
| • What is the safe dose level? | |
| • Do patients respond to the drug? | |
| • What is the estimate of the treatment effect? | |
| • What is the estimate of the variance of the treatment effect? | |
Pilot Study - Checklist: Items to include when reporting a pilot study
| PAPER SECTION | Item | Descriptor | Reported on Page # |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Does the title or abstract indicate that the study is a "pilot"? | ||
| Background | 2 | Scientific background for the main study and explanation of rationale for assessing feasibility through piloting | |
| Participants and setting | 3 | • Eligibility criteria for participants in the pilot study (these should be the same as in the main study -- if different, state the differences) | |
| • The settings and locations where the data were collected | |||
| Interventions | 4 | Provide precise details of the interventions intended for each group and how and when they were actually administered (if applicable) -- state clearly if any aspects of the intervention are assessed for feasibility | |
| Objectives | 5 | • Specific scientific objectives and hypotheses for the main study | |
| • Specific feasibility objectives | |||
| Outcomes | 6 | • Clearly defined primary and secondary outcome measures for the main study | |
| • Clearly define the feasibility outcomes and how they were operationalized -- these should include key elements such as recruitment rates, consent rates, completion rates, variance estimates, etc | |||
| Sample size | 7 | Describe how sample size was determined | |
| • In general for a pilot of a phase III trial, there is no need for a formal sample size calculation. However, confidence interval approach may be used to calculate and justify the sample size based on key feasibility objective(s). | |||
| Feasibility Criteria | 8 | Clearly describe the criteria for assessing success of feasibility -- these should be based on the feasibility objectives | |
| Statistical Methods | 9 | Describe the statistical methods for the analysis of primary and secondary feasibility outcomes | |
| Ethical Aspects | 10 | • State whether the study received research ethics approval | |
| • State how informed consent was handled -- given the feasibility nature of the study | |||
| Participant flow | 11 | Flow of participants through each stage (a flow-chart is strongly recommended). | |
| • Describe protocol deviations from pilot study as planned, together with reasons | |||
| • State the number of exclusions at each stage and reasons for exclusions | |||
| Recruitment | 12 | Report the dates defining the periods of recruitment and follow-up | |
| Baseline data | 13 | Report the baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of the participants | |
| Outcomes and estimation | 14 | For each primary and secondary feasibility outcome, report the point estimate of effect and its precision ( | |
| Interpretation | 15 | Interpretation of the results should focus on feasibility, taking into account | |
| • the stated criteria for success of feasibility; | |||
| • study hypotheses, sources of potential bias or imprecision -- given the feasibility nature of the study | |||
| • the dangers associated with multiplicity of analyses and outcomes | |||
| Generalizability | 16 | Generalizability (external validity) of the feasibility. State clearly what modifications in the design of the main study (if any) would be necessary to make it feasible | |
| Overall evidence of feasibility | 17 | General interpretation of the results in the context of current evidence of feasibility | |
| • Focus should be on feasibility | |||