| Literature DB >> 30984604 |
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30984604 PMCID: PMC6434767 DOI: 10.4103/idoj.IDOJ_475_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian Dermatol Online J ISSN: 2229-5178
Figure 1Basic framework of clinical trials
Figure 2Single arm trial schematic
Figure 3Double dummy trial design
Figure 4Run in design
Figure 5Parallel arm design
Figure 6Cross over trial design
Points to be factored in during cross over design
| Effects of intervention during first period should not carry over into second period. In case of suspected carry over effects more complex sequences are needed which increase study duration and thus the chance of drop outs |
| The treatment effect should be relatively rapid in onset with rapid reversibility of effect |
| The disease has to be chronic, stable, and non-self-resolving. This design is usually avoided in vaccine trials because immune system is permanently affected. Patient’s health status must be identical at the beginning of each treatment period |
| Period effect - the changes in patient characteristics due to the effect of the first drug or extraneous factors to which the patients are exposed to over time leads to what is called the ‘period effect’.Internal and external trial environment must remain constant over time. This reduces ‘period effect’ |
| Before the cross over is implemented, a drug free wash out period for complete reversibility of drug effect administered in the first period in a trial arm needs to be ensured so as to avoid a cumulative or substractive effect which piggy backs on to the drug administered in the second period. An accepted convention for the wash out period is five half lives of the drug involved |
| Each treatment period must give adequate time for the intervention to act meaningfully |
| Sensitivity of trial power to drop outs due to longer anticipated duration of trial |
| Identification of culprit drug for delayed adverse events during later period of the study becomes difficult |
Figure 7Factorial design
Figure 8Enrichment Enrolment Randomised withdrawal design
Rarer designs used in clinical trials
| Trial design | Description |
|---|---|
| Matched pairs design | Patients with similar characteristics who are expected to respond similarly are grouped into matched pairs and then the members of each pair are randomized to receive either drug or control. The confounding factors are eliminated and intra-group variability is reduced |
| Delayed start design (DS) | This design has initial placebo-controlled phase (patients randomized to treatment or placebo) followed by active control phase (all patients receive treatment). Those in the initial placebo group have a delayed start on active drug. Disease progression as well as disease relapses can be studied and design evaluates the effect of the treatment on the symptoms and the evolution of the disease. There must be a sufficient number of follow-up visits to measure the treatment effect. Upside of design is that every subject is exposed to active therapy. Downsides are evaluation bias and carry over effect. |
| Randomized placebo phase design (RPPD) | Subjects are first randomly allocated to either an experimental or a control group. However, after a short, fixed time period (called the placebo-phase), all patients in the control group are switched to the experimental treatment. All patients receive the tested treatment in the end - but have varying lengths of time on placebo. This design assumes that if treatment is effective, then those administered drug earlier will respond sooner. At the end of the trial, average time-to-response is compared between the two groups, most often using survival analysis methods. Upside is that all patients receive active drug by the end of trial. There is a need to establish an effective placebo phase duration (i.e., short enough to ensure no change in condition over time and long enough to ensure valid outcome measurement). A longer placebo-phase duration will decrease the required sample size but increase the chance of dropouts. |
| Stepped wedge design (SWS) | Intervention allocated sequentially to participants either as individuals or clusters of individuals is called stepped wedge design. In the first step all patients are initiated on control interventions and subsequently over 4 time periods, individual or clusters of individuals are randomized to treatment arm with all patients receiving treatment by the end of the study period. The utility rests in testing medicines that are anticipated to cause harm. It can be used when therapy cannot be initiated concurrently to all subjects simultaneously |
| Three stage design (3S) | Constitutes initial randomized placebo-control phase, a randomized withdrawal stage for responders from Stage 1, and a third phase when all placebo non-responders (from Stage 1) are first prescribed active treatment and then the responders (from Stage 3) are randomly assigned to placebo or treatment. It is an extension of randomized withdrawal design. This suits only to study chronic conditions where both response to therapy and withdrawal of therapy can be assessed. The withdrawal phase has to be sufficiently long so that the drug can be completely washed out and the clinical effects of therapy reversed. Requires less sample size than parallel arm design. Helps to evaluate the efficacy of a therapeutic agent in a particular patient subpopulation when efficacy in the general patient population has already been established |
Factors to consider in design selection
| Number and characteristics of treatments to be compared |
| Characteristics of the disease under study |
| Study objectives |
| Timeframe |
| Treatment course and duration |
| Carry over effects |
| Duration of the study which is linked with drop-out rates |
| Cost and logistics |
| Patient convenience |
| Ethical considerations |
| Statistical considerations |
| Study subject availability (disease rarity) |
| Inter and intra subject variability |
Algorithm for choice of study design
| Trial situation | Appropriate suggested design |
|---|---|
| To demonstrate superiority, equivalence, and non-inferiority | Randomized parallel arm design |
| If the intervention has a predictable and rapidly reversible effect | EERW (if efficacy is expected only in a subset), crossover (if enough sample size and stability of disease for 2 study periods), or n-of-1 design (if sufficient sample not available for crossover) |
| If the time between study inclusion and outcome assessment is short compared with recruitment time of study subjects | Adaptive design |
| Where the therapy is likely to provide a lasting response and the possibility of randomization to placebo is major impediment to recruitment | Randomized placebo phase design (RPPD) |
| If there are two or more therapiesof interest that can be given concurrently or in cases of rare disease | Factorial design, parallel arm |
| If the outcomes of intervention are irreversible | Parallel group, factorial, randomized placebo phase (RPPD), Stepped Wedge (SWS), adaptive design (not for drugs with slow response on disease) |
| (a) Minimizes exposure to placebo | RPPD, SW, Adaptive design |
| If the outcomes of intervention are reversible | Parallel group, Crossover, Factorial, N of 1, RPPD, Stepped Wedge (SWS), Enrichment Enrolment Randomised Withdrawal (EERW), Early Escape (EE), Delayed start (DS), Three Stage (3S), Adaptive |
| (a) Rapid response of disease to intervention | Any design above can be used |