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Randomized Controlled Trials in Health Services Research: Morris Weinberger, PHD

This document provides an overview of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in health services research. It discusses key aspects of RCTs including minimizing bias through randomization and blinding, designing effective interventions, developing sound study protocols, and addressing analytical issues. Key points covered are the importance of RCTs for establishing causality, threats to internal validity like non-compliance, and challenges in health services research like evaluating complex multi-component interventions. Practical advice is given around determining feasibility, needing collaboration, and using pilot studies.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
91 views47 pages

Randomized Controlled Trials in Health Services Research: Morris Weinberger, PHD

This document provides an overview of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in health services research. It discusses key aspects of RCTs including minimizing bias through randomization and blinding, designing effective interventions, developing sound study protocols, and addressing analytical issues. Key points covered are the importance of RCTs for establishing causality, threats to internal validity like non-compliance, and challenges in health services research like evaluating complex multi-component interventions. Practical advice is given around determining feasibility, needing collaboration, and using pilot studies.

Uploaded by

sreepriyakerala
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Randomized Controlled Trials in

Health Services Research


Morris Weinberger, PhD

Senior Career Scientist, HSR&D Service


Investigator, Center for Health Services
Research, Durham VAMC
VA Cyber-Seminar, January 12, 2009
Overview to Today’s Seminar
• Overview of randomized controlled trials
• Minimizing threats to internal validity
• Targets of interventions
• Analytical issues
• Practical issues and advice
Overview of Randomized
Controlled Trials
• Bias
– Systematic (non-random) error
– Bane of research, regardless of study design
– Can invalidate study results
– Can occur in any phase of research
Overview of Randomized
Controlled Trials
• Most powerful research design to
establish causality, including the
effectiveness of interventions
• Establishes causality by controlling for
confounding factors
• Well-designed experiments minimize bias
• Not suitable for all research questions
Overview of Randomized
Controlled Trials
• Subjects randomized to treatment groups
• Follow subjects prospectively
• Compare subjects across treatment groups
on relevant outcomes
Required CONSORT Figure
Overview to Today’s Seminar
• Overview of randomized trials
• Minimizing threats to internal validity
Validity
• Internal validity: Can the observed
differences between groups be
attributed to the intervention?
– Randomization
• External validity: Are the observed
differences in your study representative
of patients/subjects in general?
– Random sampling
Threats to Internal Validity
• Biased assignment of patients to groups
• Biased outcome assessment
• Non-compliance with treatment protocol
• Dropouts
• Co-intervention
• Contamination
Minimizing Threats to Internal
Validity
• Randomization
• Blinding (Masking)
• Intervention design
• Study protocol
Randomization
• Random assignment of subjects to study groups:
– Produces study groups comparable with respect to
measured and unmeasured characteristics
– Removes investigator bias in assigning patients to
groups
– Increases validity of statistical tests
• If allocation of subjects to groups is predictable,
it may lead to bias, e.g., decision to participate
Minimizing Threats to Internal
Validity
• Randomization
• Blinding (Masking)
Minimizing Threats to Internal
Validity
• Randomization
• Blinding (Masking)
• Intervention design
Considerations When
Designing Interventions

• What is the intervention?


• Is it likely to be potent?
• Is it ethical?
• Is it practical and feasible in the “real
world”?
• Will it be acceptable to patients?
• Is it effective?
What is the Intervention?
Standardization
• Who did what to whom?
• What was the dose?
• How often?
• For how long?
• Administered under what conditions?
• With what dose adjustments?
Minimizing Threats to Internal
Validity
• Randomization
• Blinding (Masking)
• Intervention design
• Study protocol
Study Protocol
• Choice of control group
• Recruitment strategies
• Retention strategies
• Outcome measures
• Evaluating effectiveness of the intervention
– Compliance with treatment protocol
– Co-intervention
– Contamination
Choosing the Control Group
• Nothing
• Usual Care
• Placebo
Recruitment Strategies
• Recruitment sources
– Community vs. patients
– Volunteer bias
• Barriers to recruitment
– Interest in subject
– Distrust of research
– Distrust of contact from unknown persons
– Transportation
– Informed consent
– Long enrollment visits
Retention
• Impact on external validity of the trial
– Who completes the trial?
• Impact on internal validity of the trial
– What if there is differential dropout?
• Impact on number of patients recruited
– How will my sample size estimates be
affected?
Design Considerations:
Choosing Measures
• Properties of the measure
– Validity and reliability
– Floor and ceiling effects
– Sensitivity to change
• Pragmatic considerations
– Setting
– Respondent burden
– Appropriateness for subjects
– Cost
Evaluating Effectiveness of the
Intervention
• Dose: Was the intervention delivered?
• Contamination: Did the control group receive
components of the intervention?
• Co-intervention: Did the treatment group
receive interventions other than what was
intended?
• Key: Measure what elements of the
intervention were delivered to all study groups
Overview to Today’s Seminar
• Overview of randomized trials
• Minimizing threats to internal validity
• Targets of interventions
Targets of Strategies to
Improve Outcomes
• Patients
• Providers
• System
Patient-Level Strategies
• Randomization is at the patient level
• Simplifies the statistical analysis
Provider-Level Strategies
• Strategies to improve quality of care by
intervening with providers
• If outcomes are at physician level, issues are
generally similar to patient-level interventions
Provider-Level Strategies
• Often, goal is to evaluate the impact of provider
interventions on patient outcomes because
– Expect intervention with provider to affect patient
outcomes (e.g., improving patients’ glycemic control)
– Concern that providing intervention to intervention
patients will affect providers behavior with control
patients (i.e. contamination)
• It seems like effective sample size should be
greater than the number of physicians
randomized
Provider-Level Strategies
• Randomizing patients assumes balance on both
measured and unmeasured variables
• Analytically, assumes that patients are
independently assigned to groups
• When unit of randomization is not the unit of
analysis:
– Patients are not independent within physicians
– Physicians not independent within setting (e.g.,
team, hospital)
– Complicates sample size estimates
Provider-Level Strategies:
Summary
• Often, interventions to improve outcomes target
providers, but analyze patients
• Reasonable, and perhaps only plausible strategy
• Must provide reviewers with clear justification
(i.e., minimizes threats to internal validity that
would otherwise result)
• Involve biostatisticians early, as the analyses
(including sample size calculations) are complex
Design Considerations:
Biomedical vs. HSR Trials
Consideration Biomedical HSR
• Patients
– Eligibility Narrow Broad
– Randomization Patient Patient, Physician,
Clinic, Hospital
• Intervention:
- Components Single Multiple
- Type Drug, device, Structure of care
procedure
- Uniformity High Low
Design Considerations:
Biomedical vs. HSR Trials
Consideration Biomedical HSR
• Intervention
– Control group Standard Usual Care
– Assess compliance Easy-Moderate Difficult
• Data Collection
– Outcomes Events, test result Patient-centered
– Process of care Easy-moderate Difficult
– Cost Easy-moderate Difficult
– Blinding Possible Not possible
Overview to Today’s Seminar
• Overview of randomized trials
• Threats to internal validity
• Targets of interventions
• Analytical issues
Analytical Issues
• Between- versus within-group comparisons
– Primary analysis is between-groups
• Controlling for baseline differences
– Randomization does not achieve balance on
key factors
Analytical Issues
• Intention to Treat: Subjects analyzed as
part of original group, regardless of
compliance, dropout, or crossover
– Question answered: What is benefit of
treatment/intervention as given?
• Per protocol: Focus on subjects who were
compliant with protocol
– Question answered: What is benefit for
people who are compliant?
Analytical Issues
• Sub-group analyses: Focus on subjects
with certain characteristics
– Question answered: Does the treatment
work for certain types of patients
• Disaggregating complex interventions:
Can we identify the effective component?
• Unit of assignment versus unit of analysis
Overview to Today’s Seminar
• Overview of randomized trials
• Threats to internal validity
• Targets of interventions
• Multi-site trials in health services
research
• Analytical issues
• Practical issues and advice
Practical Issues and Advice
• What help do I need?
• Am I ready to conduct a clinical trial?
• Is the intervention worth evaluating?
• Is the project feasible?
• What outcomes can I reasonably expect
to change?
What Help Do I Need?
• Colleagues with content and
methodological expertise and/or other
specialized skills
• Biostatistician
Biostatisticians Are Your
Friends
• Study design
• Sample size
• Measuring outcomes
• Data management
• Statistical analysis
Am I Ready to Conduct a
Clinical Trial?
• Equipoise
• Advance previous study
– Good idea, flawed study
– Application to another patient population
– Application to another clinical venue
• Relevance
– Policy makers
– Clinicians
– Health care organizations
Is the Intervention Worth
Evaluating?
• Is the study ethical?
• Is the intervention feasible and practical?
• If effective, will intervention be accepted
and useful?
– Health care organization
– Physicians
– Staff
– Patients
Is the Project Feasible?
Pilot Study as Dress Rehearsal
• Are there enough subjects?
• Do I have a practical strategy to identify, enroll
and retain subjects in the study?
• Do I have time to complete the project?
• Do I have resources to complete the study?
• Can I measure the critical variables?
• Are data collection forms reasonable?
• Do I have buy-in from the organization and
personnel (physicians, nurses, clerks, etc.)?
What Outcomes Can I
Reasonably Expect to Change?
• What should my outcomes be?
– Mortality and/or morbidity
– Clinical parameters
– Health-related quality of life
– Health services utilization/cost
Final Advice
• Specify the hypotheses
• Write early, write often:
– methods
– dummy tables
• Monitor what is happening
– Enrollment
– Retention
– Delivery of the intervention
• Review CONSORT statement on reporting
randomized trials

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