Ethics, data-dependent designs, and the strategy of clinical trials: time to start learning-as-we-go?
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Statistical Methods in Medical Research
- Vol. 11 (5) , 381-402
- https://doi.org/10.1191/0962280202sm298ra
Abstract
The seeds of modern clinical trials were unwittingly sown with the first use of randomization in a 1920s agricultural field experiment. The historical development of trials is briefly reviewed here, as are multi-farious pressures and problems faced by those involved with clinical trials today. These challenges include recruitment difficulties, the emerging rôle of patient support groups, and legal threats over informed consent, to name three. Fundamentally, they re‘ect an overall shift towards patient-centred, individual ethics. I suggest many problems may be overcome by increased implementation of hitherto neglected, data-dependent designs for clinical trials. Over a dozen arguments against their use are countered, primarily through ethical considerations. Benefits and costs of refining clinical trials strategy are explored hypothetically under enhanced use of such ‘learn-as-you-go’ designs, in contrast to traditional, equal-allocation, fixed-sample-size and frequentist-based designs. These latter methods mirror crop field trials in which one cannot make scientific progress until after gathering objective data at harvest time. Some attempts to alleviate certain problems, such as Zelen randomization to boost recruitment, or over-reliance on ‘large and simple trials’ to detect moderate-sized treatment effects, are discussed and found inadequate. A proposal for wider discussion is made to assist the selective introduction of ‘small and complex trials,’ which could simultaneously expedite medical research, satisfy the concerns of regulators, statisticians, and doctors alike, and help address the growing demands of 21st-century patients.Keywords
This publication has 81 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Evaluation of the Cost Effectiveness of Adding Lamivudine to Zidovudine-Containing Regimens in HIV InfectionPharmacoEconomics, 1999
- A Case Study of an Adaptive Clinical Trial in the Treatment of Out-Patients with Depressive DisorderJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1994
- Statistical Inference with Data-Dependent Treatment Allocation RulesJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1990
- Comparison of Bayesian with group sequential methods for monitoring clinical trialsControlled Clinical Trials, 1989
- Optimal two-stage designs for phase II clinical trialsControlled Clinical Trials, 1989
- Bayes Rules for a Clinical-Trials Model with Dichotomous ResponsesThe Annals of Statistics, 1986
- A New Design for Randomized Clinical TrialsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1979
- A Model for Selecting One of Two Medical TreatmentsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1963
- Sequential Medical TrialsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1963
- THE PROBABLE ERROR OF A MEANBiometrika, 1908