Literature DB >> 795448

Design and analysis of randomized clinical trials requiring prolonged observation of each patient. I. Introduction and design.

R Peto, M C Pike, P Armitage, N E Breslow, D R Cox, S V Howard, N Mantel, K McPherson, J Peto, P G Smith.   

Abstract

The Medical Research Council has for some years encouraged collaborative clinical trials in leukaemia and other cancers, reporting the results in the medical literature. One unreported result which deserves such publication is the development of the expertise to design and analyse such trials. This report was prepared by a group of British and American statisticians, but it is intended for people without any statistical expertise. Part I, which appears in this issue, discusses the design of such trials; Part II, which will appear separately in the January 1977 issue of the Journal, gives full instructions for the statistical analysis of such trials by means of life tables and the logrank test, including a worked example, and discusses the interpretation of trial results, including brief reports of 2 particular trials. Both parts of this report are relevant to all clinical trials which study time to death, and wound be equally relevant to clinical trials which study time to other particular classes of untoward event: first stroke, perhaps, or first relapse, metastasis, disease recurrence, thrombosis, transplant rejection, or death from a particular cause. Part I, in this issue, collects together ideas that have mostly already appeared in the medical literature, but Part II, next month, is the first simple account yet published for non-statistical physicians of how to analyse efficiently data from clinical trials of survival duration. Such trials include the majority of all clinical trials of cancer therapy; in cancer trials,however, it may be preferable to use these statistical methods to study time to local recurrence of tumour, or to study time to detectable metastatic spread, in addition to studying total survival. Solid tumours can be staged at diagnosis; if this, or any other available information in some other disease is an important determinant of outcome, it can be used to make the overall logrank test for the whole heterogeneous trial population more sensitive, and more intuitively satisfactory, for it will then only be necessary to compare like with like, and not, by chance, Stage I with Stage III.

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Year:  1976        PMID: 795448      PMCID: PMC2025229          DOI: 10.1038/bjc.1976.220

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


  7 in total

1.  Randomization of the first patient.

Authors:  T C Chalmers
Journal:  Med Clin North Am       Date:  1975-07       Impact factor: 5.456

2.  A GENERALIZED WILCOXON TEST FOR COMPARING ARBITRARILY SINGLY-CENSORED SAMPLES.

Authors:  E A GEHAN
Journal:  Biometrika       Date:  1965-06       Impact factor: 2.445

3.  Randomized clinical trials. Perspectives on some recent ideas.

Authors:  D P Byar; R M Simon; W T Friedewald; J J Schlesselman; D L DeMets; J H Ellenberg; M H Gail; J H Ware
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1976-07-08       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Statistics: the problem of examining accumulating data more than once.

Authors:  K McPherson
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1974-02-28       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  Letter: Treatment of overt meningeal leukaemia.

Authors:  M L Willoughby
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1974-03-02       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Conservatism of the approximation sigma (O-E)2-E in the logrank test for survival data or tumor incidence data.

Authors:  R Peto; M C Pike
Journal:  Biometrics       Date:  1973-09       Impact factor: 2.571

7.  Evaluation of survival data and two new rank order statistics arising in its consideration.

Authors:  N Mantel
Journal:  Cancer Chemother Rep       Date:  1966-03
  7 in total
  368 in total

1.  ACTG (AIDS Clinical Trials Group) 384: a strategy trial comparing consecutive treatments for HIV-1.

Authors:  L M Smeaton; V DeGruttola; G K Robbins; R W Shafer
Journal:  Control Clin Trials       Date:  2001-04

Review 2.  Randomised controlled trials in cardiovascular medicine: past achievements, future challenges.

Authors:  S Yusuf
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1999-08-28

3.  Role of external evidence in monitoring clinical trials: experience from a perinatal trial.

Authors:  P Brocklehurst; D Elbourne; Z Alfirevic
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2000-04-08

4.  Bayesian communication: a clinically significant paradigm for electronic publication.

Authors:  H P Lehmann; S N Goodman
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2000 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.497

5.  For and against: clinical equipoise and not the uncertainty principle is the moral underpinning of the randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  C Weijer; S H Shapiro; K Cranley Glass
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2000-09-23

6.  The effectiveness of chemotherapy for treatment of high grade astrocytoma in children: results of a randomized trial. A report from the Childrens Cancer Study Group.

Authors:  R Sposto; I J Ertel; R D Jenkin; C P Boesel; J L Venes; J A Ortega; A E Evans; W Wara; D Hammond
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  1989-07       Impact factor: 4.130

7.  Long-term results for children with high-risk neuroblastoma treated on a randomized trial of myeloablative therapy followed by 13-cis-retinoic acid: a children's oncology group study.

Authors:  Katherine K Matthay; C Patrick Reynolds; Robert C Seeger; Hiroyuki Shimada; E Stanton Adkins; Daphne Haas-Kogan; Robert B Gerbing; Wendy B London; Judith G Villablanca
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-01-26       Impact factor: 44.544

8.  Aetiology of colorectal cancer and relevance of monogenic inheritance.

Authors:  M Ponz de Leon; P Benatti; F Borghi; M Pedroni; A Scarselli; C Di Gregorio; L Losi; A Viel; M Genuardi; G Abbati; G Rossi; M Menigatti; I Lamberti; G Ponti; L Roncucci
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 23.059

9.  Events per person year--a dubious concept.

Authors:  J Windeler; S Lange
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1995-02-18

10.  Metoclopramide in the reduction of nausea and vomiting associated with combined chemotherapy.

Authors:  R Cox; C E Newman; M J Leyland
Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol       Date:  1982       Impact factor: 3.333

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