| Literature DB >> 21846349 |
Milensu Shanyinde1, Ruth M Pickering, Mark Weatherall.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the last decade several authors have reviewed the features of pilot and feasibility studies and advised on the issues that should be addressed within them. We extend this literature by examining published pilot/feasibility trials that incorporate random allocation, examining their stated objectives, results presented and conclusions drawn, and comparing drug and non-drug trials.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21846349 PMCID: PMC3170294 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-11-117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Results of the literature search, and exclusions from the selected sample
| MEDLINE/EMBASE search | Number of papers | |
|---|---|---|
| pilot.ti | 40741 | |
| feasibility.ti | 16179 | |
| 1 or 2 | 56430 | |
| limit 3 to randomized controlled trial | 7553 | |
| limit 4 to english language | 7398 | |
| limit 5 to humans | 7348 | |
| limit 6 to yr = "2000 - 2009" | 5965 | |
| remove duplicates from 7 | 3581 | |
| Papers randomly selected from 8 | 75 | |
| Remove cross-over trials (n = 14) | 61 | |
| Remove trials with only one arm (n = 1) | 60 | |
| Remove historically controlled trials (n = 2) | 58 | |
| Remove non-randomized trials (n = 2) | 56 | |
| Remove letters (n = 1) | 55 | |
| Remove brief reports (n = 1) | 54 | |
| Remove study protocols (n = 1) | 53 | |
| Remove review articles (n = 1) | 52 | |
| Remove articles where 'pilot' or 'feasibility' in the trial did not relate to the trial (n = 2) | 50 | |
Figure 1Frequencies of papers identified with 'pilot', 'feasibility' or both in the title (searched on 21.
Characteristics of the drug and non-drug trials
| Drug | Non-drug | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 (89%) | 17 (77%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 4 (18%) | ||
| 2 (7%) | 1 (5%) | ||
| 18 (64%) | 11 (50%) | ||
| 10 (36%) | 9 (41%) | ||
| 0 | 2 (9%) | ||
| 15 (54%) | 16 (73%) | ||
| 8 | 5 | ||
| 4 | 0 | ||
| 1 | 0 | ||
| 0 | 1 | ||
| 20 (71%) | 18 (82%) | ||
| 21 (75%) | 7 (32%) | ||
| 15 (54%) | 1 (5%) | ||
| 18 (64%) | 15 (68%) | ||
| 2 (7%) | 1 (5%) | ||
| 3 (11%) | 0 | ||
| 5 (18%) | 6 (27%) | ||
| 34 | 30.5 | ||
| 10-87 | 6-3318 | ||
| n = 1 | n = 0 | ||
Figure 2Percentage of papers in which feasibility, efficacy and safety/toxicity objectives, results, discussion or conclusions were presented (percentages for the Conclusions section based on the 32 papers including one).
Methodological issues that were addressed numerically with frequencies of participants or other statistical methods
| Issue | Drug | Non-drug | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 21 (75%) | 9 (41%) | ||
| 5 (18%) | 4 (18%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 3 (14%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 6 (27%) | ||
| 16 (57%) | 9 (41%) | ||
| 6 (21%) | 7 (32%) | ||
| 0 | 0 | ||
| 6 (21%) | 6 (27%) | ||
| 14 (50%) | 10 (46%) | ||
| 7 (25%) | 7 (32%) | ||
| 5 (18%) | 1 (5%) | ||
| 2 (7%) | 4 (18%) | ||
| 2 (7%) | 1 (5%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 1 (5%) | ||
| 0 | 1 (5%) | ||
| 0 | 2(9%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 2 (9%) | ||
| 0 | 1 (5%) | ||
| 0 | 2 (9%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 4 (18%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 0 | ||
| 0 | 1 (5%) | ||
| 0 | 2 (9%) | ||
| 0 | 1 (5%) | ||
| 1 (4%) | 0 | ||
| 0 | 3 (14%) | ||
| 0 | 1 (4%) | ||
Results, discussion and conclusions concerning efficacy
| Drug | Non-drug | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| | 4 (14%) | 4 (18%) | |
| 4 (14%) | 1 (5%) | ||
| 8 (29%) | 5 (23%) | ||
| 12 (43%) | 12 (55%) | ||
| 13 (46%) | 11 (50%) | ||
| | 12 (43%) | 9 (43%) | |
| | 5 (18%) | 4 (19%) | |
| 11 (39%) | 8 (38%)1 | ||
| | 1 (4%) | 3 (14%) | |
| | 11 (39%) | 9 (41%) | |
| 16 (57%) | 10 (46%) | ||
| 24 (86%) | 19 (88%) | ||
1 - One paper reporting a non-drug trial didn't report any significance tests or confidence intervals and was excluded from these figures
Discussion and conclusions about planning further studies
| Drug | Non-drug | P | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 (29%) | 3 (14%) | 0.0021 | ||
| 9 (32%) | 2 (9%) | |||
| 9 (32%) | 7 (32%) | |||
| 2 (7%) | 10 (46%) | |||
| 6 (21%) | 1 (5%) | 0.0021 | ||
| 21 (75%) | 13 (59%) | |||
| 1 (5%) | 8 (36%) | |||
| 0 | 0 | |||
| 7/14 (50%) | 16/18 (89%) | 0.0223 | ||
| 5 (18%) | 11 (50%) | 0.0313 | ||
| 3 (11%) | 3 (14%) | 1.0003 | ||
1 - Mann Whitney U test
2 - Restricted to papers with a Conclusions section
3 - Exact Pearson's chi-squared test
Methodological issues that need evaluation in the context of an RCT
| Issue | Needs to be evaluated in the context of a randomized pilot trial | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| ✗ | The numbers in a pilot RCT are unlikely to be adequate to get accurate estimates of effect size of variances. | |
| ✗ | ||
| ✓ | Referrals from clinicians are likely to depend on the RCT context. | |
| ✓ | Consent rates in the RCT context are unlikely to be accurately estimated from asking about likely consent beforehand | |
| ✓ | ||
| ✓ | ||
| ✗ | Though, this could potentially depend on preference amongst interventions offered in the main trial | |
| ✗ | Though, this could potentially depend on preference amongst interventions offered in the main trial | |
| ✗ | ||
| ✗ | ||
| ✗ | ||
| ✓ | Retention may differ between experimental and control groups, and may depend on treatment preferences | |
| ✓ | ||
| ✓ | ||