A better way to test new treatments? Approach could help patients and give useful results
July 2, 2012 in Medical research
A new approach to testing medical treatment options could ensure that more patients get the most beneficial treatment for them but still yield valuable research results that stand up to scientific scrutiny.
The approach tries to overcome a huge chicken-and-egg problem in medical research: Not enough people volunteer for studies of new treatments partly because researchers can't promise the studies will help them -- but without enough volunteers, researchers can't study new treatment options.
But a new "adaptive" way of designing medical studies could help. In a recent paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association, and in several clinical trials now being planned at the University of Michigan Health System and partner institutions, adaptive design has come to the fore.
Experts from U-M and other major medical centers say that the approach makes the most sense in situations where time is of the essence such as emergency care or where the medical stakes are high and there are few good treatment options such as some forms of cancer. They also note there are plenty of situations where adaptive design isn't feasible or needed.
But for patients who are being asked to participate in research studies, an adaptive design could help tip the balance between saying yes and saying no. It could also help patients who enter trials have a clearer understanding of what the stakes are for them personally, not just for the generation of patients who will come after them.
"It takes more preparation for the researchers up front, and more sophisticated statistical analysis as the trial is going on, but in the end more study volunteers will be more likely to get the best option for them, and the results will still be scientifically sound," says William Meurer, M.D., a U-M emergency physician who is lead author of the recent JAMA viewpoint article.
The "adaptive" approach to clinical trial design centers around how patients are randomly assigned to one of the two or more groups in a study. In a non-adaptive trial, everyone who volunteers from the first patient to the last gets assigned with what amounts to a coin toss, and the groups end up being of similar size.
But in an adaptive trial, the trial's statistical algorithm constantly monitors the results from the first volunteers, and looks for any sign that one treatment is better than another. It doesn't tell the patients or the study doctors what they're seeing, but they do start randomly assigning slightly more patients into the group that's getting the treatment that is starting to look better. In other words, the trial "learns" along the way.
"It's a way of assigning patients at slightly less than random chance, allowing us to do what might be in the best interest of each patient as the trial goes along," says Meurer, an assistant professor of emergency medicine and neurology at the U-M Medical School.
By the end of the trial, one of the groups of patients will therefore be larger, which means the statistical analysis of the results will be trickier and the results might be a little less definitive. But if the number of patients in the trial is large, and if the difference between treatments is sizable, the results will still have scientific validity, Meurer says.
A clinical trial of post-stroke blood sugar treatment is one example of this kind of approach. It's being coordinated by the Neurological Emergencies Treatment Trial network based at U-M, and conducted at dozens of centers including, in coming months, U-M's own emergency department and inpatient stroke unit.
The study, called SHINE, uses an adaptive method of assigning stroke survivors to a target blood sugar level in the first day after their stroke with the goal of finding out how much impact blood sugar control has on how well the patients do overall. The study was designed by researchers at the University of Virginia, Medical College of Georgia, University of Texas Southwestern, and the NETT Statistical and Data Management Center at the Medical University of South Carolina.
Other emergency treatment studies now being planned at U-M with collaborators from throughout the country with adaptive design include one for therapeutic hypothermia after cardiac arrest, and hypothermia after spinal cord trauma. In both cases, it's not yet known what length of time for cooling produces the best outcome for patients, though cooling is being used for both types of patients already. In addition, the team has also developed an adaptive comparative effectiveness trial to evaluate three different medications to stop ongoing seizures in patients who have failed first line treatment.
When time is of the essence and patients or their loved ones are being asked to make a decision about being in a clinical trial at the very time when they are in a health crisis, and the difference between treatment options could be large, adaptive design can be most powerful, Meurer says. Pharmaceutical companies and medical device manufacturers have been faster to adopt adaptive design for their trials, but academic centers that conduct huge numbers of non-industry trials have not.
But when researchers just want to compare two standard treatments to make sure one isn't grossly inferior, or when they want to pinpoint the precise impact of a preventive measure (such as aspirin) across a large population (such as heart attack survivors), adaptive designs usually won't help, he notes.
"Adaptive design gives us the potential to get it right and put more people where the bang for the buck is, but still have the change be invisible to the physicians and staff carrying out the trial," Meurer says. "If a particular option helps patients about 10 percent more than other options, but the adaptive design's impact on the statistical results means that you can only say the effect is somewhere between 9 percent and 11 percent, the tradeoff is still worth it."
More information: JAMA. 2012;307(22):2377-2378. doi:10.1001/jama.2012.4174
Journal reference:
Journal of the American Medical Association
Provided by
University of Michigan Health System
-
Pharmaceuticals Look to Adaptive Trials
Aug 14, 2009 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Adaptive trial designs could accelerate HIV vaccine development
Apr 20, 2011 |
not rated yet |
0
-
New clinical trial design promises to accelerate cancer drug approvals
Jun 14, 2012 |
not rated yet |
0
-
FDA OKs vitamin C trial for cancer
Jan 12, 2007 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Lower income cancer patients less likely to be involved in clinical trials
Jun 03, 2012 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Motion perception revisited: High Phi effect challenges established motion perception assumptions
Apr 23, 2013 |
3 / 5 (2) |
2
-
Anything you can do I can do better: Neuromolecular foundations of the superiority illusion (Update)
Apr 02, 2013 |
4.5 / 5 (11) |
5
-
The visual system as economist: Neural resource allocation in visual adaptation
Mar 30, 2013 |
5 / 5 (2) |
9
-
Separate lives: Neuronal and organismal lifespans decoupled
Mar 27, 2013 |
4.9 / 5 (8) |
0
-
Sizing things up: The evolutionary neurobiology of scale invariance
Feb 28, 2013 |
4.8 / 5 (10) |
14
-
How can there be a term called "intestinal metaplasia" of stomach
21 hours ago
-
Pressure-volume curve: Elastic Recoil Pressure don't make sense
May 18, 2013
-
If you became brain-dead, would you want them to pull the plug?
May 17, 2013
-
MRI bill question
May 15, 2013
-
Ratio of Hydrogen of Oxygen in Dessicated Animal Protein
May 13, 2013
-
Alcohol and acetaminophen
May 13, 2013
- More from Physics Forums - Medical Sciences
More news stories
H. pylori, smoking trends, and gastric cancer in US men
Trends in Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) and smoking explain a significant proportion of the decline of intestinal-type noncardia gastric adenocarcinoma (NCGA) incidence in US men between 1978 and 2008, and are estimated ...
Medical research
11 hours ago |
not rated yet |
0
Common food supplement fights degenerative brain disorders
Widely available in pharmacies and health stores, phosphatidylserine is a natural food supplement produced from beef, oysters, and soy. Proven to improve cognition and slow memory loss, it's a popular treatment for older ...
Medical research
16 hours ago |
5 / 5 (3) |
0
|
Finding a family for a pair of orphan receptors in the brain
Researchers at Emory University have identified a protein that stimulates a pair of "orphan receptors" found in the brain, solving a long-standing biological puzzle and possibly leading to future treatments for neurological ...
Medical research
16 hours ago |
5 / 5 (1) |
0
|
Insight into the dazzling impact of insulin in cells
Australian scientists have charted the path of insulin action in cells in precise detail like never before. This provides a comprehensive blueprint for understanding what goes wrong in diabetes.
Medical research
17 hours ago |
4.6 / 5 (7) |
0
|
Do men's and women's hearts burn fuel differently?
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine will study gender differences in how the heart uses and stores fat—its main energy source—and how changes in fat metabolism play ...
Medical research
20 hours ago |
not rated yet |
0
Phthalates: Study links chemicals widely found in plastics, processed food to elevated blood pressure in children, teens
Plastic additives known as phthalates (pronounced THAL-ates) are odorless, colorless and just about everywhere: They turn up in flooring, plastic cups, beach balls, plastic wrap, intravenous tubing and—according to the ...
If you can remember it, you can remember it wrong
(Medical Xpress)—Native peoples in regions where cameras are uncommon sometimes react with caution when their picture is taken. The fear that something must have been stolen from them to create the photo ...
B vitamins could delay dementia
(Medical Xpress)—Despite spending billions of dollars on research and development, drug companies have been unable to come up with effective treatments for dementia and Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Now, A. ...
New sleeping pill poised to hit US markets
An experimental sleeping pill from US drug company Merck is effective at helping people fall and stay asleep, according to reviewers at the US Food and Drug Administration, which could soon approve the new drug.
Reducing caloric intake delays nerve cell loss
Activating an enzyme known to play a role in the anti-aging benefits of calorie restriction delays the loss of brain cells and preserves cognitive function in mice, according to a study published in the May ...
Antidepressant reduces stress-induced heart condition
A drug commonly used to treat depression and anxiety may improve a stress-related heart condition in people with stable coronary heart disease, according to researchers at Duke Medicine.