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Clinical Trials for Comparative Effectiveness Research

Clinical Trials for Comparative Effectiveness Research. Mark Hlatky MD Stanford University January 10, 2012. What is CER?. Generation and synthesis of evidence that compares the benefits and harms of alternative methods to prevent, diagnose, treat, and monitor a clinical condition

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Clinical Trials for Comparative Effectiveness Research

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  1. Clinical Trials for Comparative Effectiveness Research Mark Hlatky MD Stanford University January 10, 2012

  2. What is CER? • Generation and synthesis of evidence that • compares the benefits and harms • of alternative methods to prevent, diagnose, treat, and monitor a clinical condition • or to improve the delivery of care. • The purpose of CER is to • assist consumers, clinicians, purchasers, and policy makers • make informed decisions • that will improve health care • at both the individual and population levels. Institute of Medicine, 2009

  3. CER Methods • CER can use very different research design • Randomized trials • Observational studies using registries, claims, or electronic health records • Simulations, models, meta-analysis • Randomized trials accepted as best approach because of control of confounding

  4. RCT Limitations • Most trials due for regulatory approvals, and not good for CER • Use placebo, not “next best therapy” • Use ideal patients, not typical ones • Lab measures as endpoints • Safety poorly assessed

  5. CER Trials • Limitations of RCTs for CER are not inherent • Can compare new therapy with an active control • Can enroll representative patients • Can focus on patient-centered outcomes

  6. Representative trials • Generalizability of RCT results is always controversial • Inclusion/exclusion criteria can be minimized to broaden patient selection • Also important to include representative practice sites, particularly for trials of procedures • Volume-outcome relationship • Centers of excellence vs typical practice locations

  7. Large Practical Trials • Larger sample sizes needed for CER trials • Use of active controls narrows expected superiority margin • “Equivalence trials ”need large sample sizes to narrow confidence intervals • Analysis of subgroups requires more patients • Trials need to be simpler and less expensive to be practical for CER

  8. Reducing Trial Costs • Data collection is expensive, so minimize trial-specific data • Compact, simple data forms • Rely on existing mechanisms to capture data at baseline and during follow-up (hybrid trials) • Clinical registries (esp baseline data) • Electronic health records • Claims data

  9. Clinical Registries • Registries are a middle ground between RCTs and regular care • Data elements standardized, collected as part of routine care • e.g., ACC PCI registry, STS CABG registry • Could use registry to collect clinical data, and just add randomization

  10. Follow-Up Data • Registries typically collect data from acute care or procedures • Long-term follow-up needed • Link to claims, EHRs, or mortality files • Is elaborate adjudication of non-fatal outcomes necessary, or could claims be used instead? • Web follow-up for symptoms, functional status?

  11. Cluster RCTs • CER also interested in quality of care, health delivery mechanisms, etc. • Can randomize practice sites to alternative care approaches (e.g., disease management) • Could also use cluster trials for “strategy trials” or default management approaches to common conditions (eg diabetes, hypertension)

  12. Practical, Cluster RCT: Systems Approach to Heart Failure Care

  13. Conclusions • RCT is one of several designs for CER studies • Larger trials generally needed for CER • Newer designs for RCTs needed to keep costs down and make CER feasible

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