| Literature DB >> 27600407 |
Anando Sen1, Shreya Chakrabarti2, Andrew Goldstein3, Shuang Wang4, Patrick B Ryan5, Chunhua Weng6.
Abstract
The design of randomized controlled clinical studies can greatly benefit from iterative assessments of population representativeness of eligibility criteria. We propose a multi-trait metric - GIST 2.0 that can compute the a priori generalizability based on the population representativeness of a clinical study by explicitly modeling the dependencies among all eligibility criteria. We evaluate this metric on twenty clinical studies of two diseases and analyze how a study's eligibility criteria affect its generalizability (collectively and individually). We statistically analyze the effects of trial setting, trait selection and trait summarizing technique on GIST 2.0. Finally we provide theoretical as well as empirical validations for the expected properties of GIST 2.0.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trials; Eligibility criteria; Generalizability; Population representativeness; Trait dependencies
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27600407 PMCID: PMC5077682 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbi.2016.09.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Inform ISSN: 1532-0464 Impact factor: 6.317