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Interventional trials
EM Critical Appraisal Day 13th July 2016 Tom Abbott | MRC/BJA Clinical Research Training Fellow William Harvey Research Institute @_tomabbott
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Levels of Evidence Belsey What is EBM?
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Critical appraisal Population Intervention Comparator Outcome(s)
Study design SIGN = Scottish intercollegiate guidelines network.
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Effect measures Risk ratio = (a/[a+b]) / (c/[c+d])
Outcome – yes Outcome - No Exposure - Yes a b Exposure - No c d Risk ratio = (a/[a+b]) / (c/[c+d]) Odds ratio = (a/b) / (c/d) or ad/bc RR ~ OR, except where small sample (different denominator) or where very common outcome (different denominator).
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Risk ratio = (104/[104+1548]) / (193/[193+2626]) = 0.92
PARAMEDIC trial 30-day survival 30-day mortality LUCAS-2 104 1548 Manual compressions 193 2626 Risk ratio = (104/[ ]) / (193/[ ]) = 0.92 Odds ratio = (104/1548) / (193/2626) = 0.91 LUCAS-2 vs. manual CPR in out of hospital cardiac arrest. No difference between groups.
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Absolute vs. relative risk
In a multicenter trial conducted in the tertiary care setting, protocol-based resuscitation of patients in whom septic shock was diagnosed in the emergency department did not improve outcomes.
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Absolute vs. relative risk
Mortality Survival EGDT 92 347 Standard care 86 370 AR = (92/[92+347]) - (86/[86+370]) = 0.02 RR = (92/[92+347]) / (86/[86+370]) = 1.11 Or, RR = AR / CER = 0.02 / 0.19 = 11.0% NNT (H) = 1 / AR = 1 / 0.02 = 50 CER = control event rate.
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Interpreting an observation
True observation Confounding Effect Bias Chance
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Confounding Exposure Confounder Outcome
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Bias Selection bias Observer bias Bias Information bias Recall bias
Information bias = measurement error, misclassification
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Randomisation… Reduces confounding by minimising between group differences. Equal distribution of confounding variables. Reduces selection bias by random allocation. Methods of randomisation.
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Allocation concealment ≠ blinding
Concealment hides the allocation sequence. Done automatically by computer generated allocation, but important if using sealed envelope/block randomiation etc. Reduces selection bias.
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Blinding reduces observer bias
Information bias and differential misclassification.
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Who was blinded? Single: Either researcher or subject is blinded.
Double: Both researcher and subject blinded. Triple: Researcher, patient and statistician blinded. ….....Open study group allocation.
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Intention to treat analysis
ITT avoids artefact due to attrition by non-random cross over. Does not require monitoring of compliance. Important in pragmatic trials where the effect measure effectiveness not efficacy. i.e. treatment policy rather than treatment actually received. Figures from: The Drs guide to critical appraisal Gosall and Gosall
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Sample size Larger samples more precise estimates
Greater precision = narrow confidence intervals Two approaches: Estimation of a measure with a specified precision Based on hypothesis test or demonstrating a specified significance level SIGN = Scottish intercollegiate guidelines network.
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Error Type I error Probability of rejecting null hypothesis when it is true Type II error Probability of not rejecting the null hypothesis when it is false SIGN = Scottish intercollegiate guidelines network.
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Power Probability that a hypothesis test with give a statistically significant result if an effect truly exists 1 – type II error rate Chosen a priori Usually 80% SIGN = Scottish intercollegiate guidelines network.
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Primary outcome Composite outcome?
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Abbott et al. Resuscitation 2015.
Example of a composite outcome measure. Abbott et al 2015 Abbott et al. Resuscitation 2015.
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CONSORT
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Trial registration
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Standard outcome measures….
COMET = Core outcome measures in effectiveness trials
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Levels of Evidence Belsey What is EBM?
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P-value vs. confidence interval
MRC CRASH Trial, Lancet 2005; 365:
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Two trials Small group work
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Critical appraisal Population Intervention Comparator Outcome(s)
Study design SIGN = Scottish intercollegiate guidelines network.
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