Literature DB >> 2727468

How study design affects outcomes in comparisons of therapy. I: Medical.

G A Colditz1, J N Miller, F Mosteller.   

Abstract

We analysed 113 reports published in 1980 in a sample of medical journals to relate features of study design to the magnitude of gains attributed to new therapies over old. Overall we rated 87 per cent of new therapies as improvements over standard therapies. The mean gain (measured by the Mann-Whitney statistic) was relatively constant across study designs, except for non-randomized controlled trials with sequential assignment to therapy, which showed a significantly higher likelihood that a patient would do better on the innovation than on standard therapy (p = 0.004). Randomized controlled trials that did not use a double-blind design had a higher likelihood of showing a gain for the innovation than did double-blind trials (p = 0.02). Any evaluation of an innovation may include both bias and the true efficacy of the new therapy, therefore we may consider making adjustments for the average bias associated with a study design. When interpreting an evaluation of a new therapy, readers should consider the impact of the following average adjustments to the Mann-Whitney statistic: for trials with non-random sequential assignment a decrease of 0.15, for non-double-blind randomized controlled trials a decrease of 0.11.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2727468     DOI: 10.1002/sim.4780080408

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stat Med        ISSN: 0277-6715            Impact factor:   2.373


  79 in total

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Review 4.  A review of treatment interventions in whiplash-associated disorders.

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Review 5.  Global registries for measuring pharmacoeconomic and quality-of-life outcomes: focus on design and data collection, analysis and interpretation.

Authors:  Lisa Kennedy; Ann-Marie Craig
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 4.981

Review 6.  Clinical guidelines: developing guidelines.

Authors:  P G Shekelle; S H Woolf; M Eccles; J Grimshaw
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7.  Association of industry funding with the outcome and quality of randomized controlled trials of drug therapy for rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  Nasim A Khan; Juan I Lombeida; Manisha Singh; Horace J Spencer; Karina D Torralba
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8.  Evaluation of new treatments in radiation oncology: are they better than standard treatments?

Authors:  Heloisa P Soares; Ambuj Kumar; Stephanie Daniels; Suzanne Swann; Alan Cantor; Iztok Hozo; Mike Clark; Fadila Serdarevic; Clement Gwede; Andy Trotti; Benjamin Djulbegovic
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9.  Assessment of methodological quality of primary studies by systematic reviews: results of the metaquality cross sectional study.

Authors:  Lorenzo P Moja; Elena Telaro; Roberto D'Amico; Ivan Moschetti; Laura Coe; Alessandro Liberati
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10.  Characteristics of opioid-using pregnant women who accept or refuse participation in a clinical trial: screening results from the MOTHER study.

Authors:  Susan M Stine; Sarah H Heil; Karol Kaltenbach; Peter R Martin; Mara G Coyle; Gabriele Fischer; Amelia M Arria; Peter Selby; Hendree E Jones
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