202
THE STUDY DESIGNS •A STUDY DESIGN IS A SPECIFIC PLAN OR PROTOCOL FOR CONDUCTING THE STUDY, WHICH ALLOWS THE INVESTIGATOR TO TRANSLATE THE CONCEPTUAL HYPOTHESIS INTO AN OPERATIONAL ONE.

THE STUDY DESIGNS

  • Upload
    hisa

  • View
    46

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

THE STUDY DESIGNS. A STUDY DESIGN IS A SPECIFIC PLAN OR PROTOCOL FOR CONDUCTING THE STUDY, WHICH ALLOWS THE INVESTIGATOR TO TRANSLATE THE CONCEPTUAL HYPOTHESIS INTO AN OPERATIONAL ONE. CRITERIA FOR SELECTION OF THE RIGHT DESIGN. RELEVANT :DESIGN ALLOWS YOU TO ANSWER YOUR RESEARCH QUESTION - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE STUDY DESIGNS• A STUDY DESIGN IS A SPECIFIC PLAN OR

PROTOCOL FOR CONDUCTING THE STUDY, WHICH ALLOWS THE INVESTIGATOR TO TRANSLATE THE CONCEPTUAL HYPOTHESIS INTO AN OPERATIONAL ONE.

Page 2: THE STUDY DESIGNS

CRITERIA FOR SELECTION OF THE RIGHT DESIGN

RELEVANT :DESIGN ALLOWS YOU TO ANSWER YOUR RESEARCH QUESTION

NOVEL :DESIGN ALLOWS MEANINGFUL CONTRIBUTION TO EXISTING KNOWLEDGE ~ NEW INSIGHTS

Page 3: THE STUDY DESIGNS

FEASIBLEDESIGN ALLOWS STUDY TO BE DONE

WITHIN AVAILABLE TIME AND FUNDS

SIMPLEALWAYS AVOID ALL UNNECESSARY

COMPLEXITIES

Page 4: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE BASIS OF A GOOD RESEARCH IS AN APPROPRIATE STUDY DESIGN

• MANY CLASSIFICATIONS FOR THE RESEARCH DESIGNS RESULTING IN CONFUSION AND DILEMA

Page 5: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE STUDY DESIGNS ARE CLASSIFIED INTO:

• DESCRIPTIVE STUDY DESIGNS: AIM TO SEARCH FOR FACTS.

• ANALYTICAL STUDY DESIGNS: AIM TO SEARCH FOR CAUSES.

• EXPERIMENTAL STUDY DESIGNS: AIM TO PUT SOLUTION INTO ACTIONS.

Page 6: THE STUDY DESIGNS

MAIN TYPES OF EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDIESSTUDIES PREVENTIONS AND TREATMENTS FOR DISEASES; INVESTIGATOR ACTIVELY MANIPULATES WHICH GROUPS RECEIVE THE AGENT UNDER STUDY.

EXPERIMENTAL

STUDIES CAUSES, PREVENTIONS,AND TREATMENTS FOR DISEASES;INVESTIGATOR PASSIVELY OBSERVESAS NATURE TAKES ITS COURSE.

OBSERVATIONAL

TYPICALLY EXAMINES MULTIPLE HEALTH EFFECTS OF AN EXPOSURE; SUBJECTS ARE DEFINED ACCORDING TO THEIR EXPOSURE LEVELS AND FOLLOWED FOR DISEASEOCCURRENCE

COHORT.

TYPICALLY EXAMINES MULTIPLE EXPOSURES IN RELATION TO A DISEASE; SUBJECTS ARE DEFINED AS CASES AND CONTROLS, AND EXPOSURE HISTORIES ARE COMPARED

CASE–CONTROL

Page 7: THE STUDY DESIGNS

EXAMINES RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EXPOSURE AND DISEASE PREVALENCE IN A DEFINED POPULATION AT A SINGLE POINT IN TIME.

CROSS-SECTIONAL

EXAMINES RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EXPOSURE AND DISEASE WITH POPULATION-LEVEL RATHER THAN INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL DATA.

ECOLOGICAL

Page 8: THE STUDY DESIGNS

EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDY DESIGNS

Page 9: THE STUDY DESIGNS

Hierarchy of Epidemiologic Study Design

Page 10: THE STUDY DESIGNS

STUDY DESIGNS• THE DESCRIPTIVE STUDY DESIGNS:• THESE STUDIES ARE CONCERNED WITH

OBSERVING THE DISEASE DISTRIBUTION OR HEALTH RELATED EVENTS AND EVENTS SEEM TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISEASE.

Page 11: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• WHEN IS THE DISEASE OCCURRING?• (TIME DISTRIBUTION)• WHERE IS THE DISEASE OCCURRING?• (PLACE DISTRIBUTION)• WHO IS AFFECTED? (PERSON

DISTRIBUTION)

Page 12: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 13: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 14: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 15: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE PROCEDURES IN THE DESCRIPTIVE STUDIES

• DEFINE THE DISEASE UNDER THE STUDY.• DEFINE THE POPULATION UNDER THE STUDY.• DESCRIBE THE DISEASE BY TIME, PERSON AND

PLACE.• MEASUREMENT OF THE DISEASE. • COMPARING WITH KNOWN INDICES.• FORMULATION OF AETIOLOGICAL HYPOTHESIS.

Page 16: THE STUDY DESIGNS

SURVEY• A SURVEY IS A SIMPLE DECRIPTIVE

DESIGN AND USUALLY DEFINED AS COLLECTION OF DATA FROM ALL INDIVIDUALS OR A SAMPLE OF INDIVIDUALS CHOSEN TO BE REPRESENTATIVE OF THE POPULATION FROM WHICH THEY ARE DRAWN.

Page 17: THE STUDY DESIGNS

CROSS SECTIONAL STUDY

• PREVALENCE RATE STUDY, DISEASE FREQUENCY STUDY.• THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE

DISEASE & OTHER VARIABLES OF INTEREST AS THEY EXIST AT ONE PARTICULAR POINT OF TIME

Page 18: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ).).

Page 19: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDIES DETERMINE THE PRESENCE (PREVALENCE) OF BOTH EXPOSURE AND DISEASE IN THE SUBJECTS AND

• DO NOT DETERMINE THE DEVELOPMENT OF DISEASE OR RISK OF DISEASE (INCIDENCE).

Page 20: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• MOREOVER, SINCE BOTH EXPOSURE AND DISEASE ARE DETERMINED IN AN INDIVIDUAL AT THE SAME POINT IN TIME,

• IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO ESTABLISH THE TEMPORAL RELATION BETWEEN EXPOSURE AND DISEASE—

Page 21: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THAT IS, THAT THE EXPOSURE PRECEDED THE DISEASE, WHICH WOULD BE NECESSARY FOR DRAWING ANY CAUSAL INFERENCE.

Page 22: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THUS, A RESEARCHER MAY USE A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY TO DETERMINE THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN A PERSONAL CHARACTERISTIC THAT DOES NOT CHANGE OVER TIME, SUCH AS BLOOD GROUPING, AND EXISTENCE OF A DISEASE,

• .

Page 23: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• SUCH AS APLASTIC ANEMIA, BY EXAMINING INDIVIDUALS AND DETERMINING THEIR BLOOD TYPES AND WHETHER THEY SUFFER FROM APLASTIC ANEMIA

Page 24: THE STUDY DESIGNS

DESIGN OF A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY

Page 25: THE STUDY DESIGNS

INTERPRETATION• THE FINDINGS CAN BE VIEWED IN 2X2 TABLE AS FOLLOWS:

Page 26: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 27: THE STUDY DESIGNS

CROSS SECTIONAL STUDY OF ELEVATED BLOOD PRESSURE

• MEASURE THE B.P. AMONG THE STUDY POPULATION: PREVALENCE OF HYPERTENSION.• COLLECT DATA ON AGE, SEX, SOCIAL

CLASS AND OCCUPATION.• DETERMINE HOW PREVALENCE OF

HYPERTENSION IS RELATED TO THESE VARIABLES

Page 28: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• BENEFITS OF CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY::1. FEASIBILITY: THEY ARE EASY TO CARRY

OUT

2. THE ASSOCIATED COST IS LOW.

3. THEY MAY BE CARRIED OUT IN A RELATIVELY SHORT TIME,

Page 29: THE STUDY DESIGNS

4. PREVALENCE CAN BECALCULATED: IT IS OFTEN THEMOST RELEVANT MEASURE FORBURDEN OF DISEASE, INFORMINGHEALTH CARE STRATEGIES.

Page 30: THE STUDY DESIGNS

5. THE MEASURE OF ASSOCIATION IS READILY AVAILABLE, FROM WHICH ONE CAN CALCULATE THE ODDS RATIO FOR THE PREVALENT DISEASE.

Page 31: THE STUDY DESIGNS

LONGITUDINAL STUDY DESIGNS

• OBSERVATIONS ARE REPEATED IN THE SAME POPULATION OVER A PROLONGED PERIOD OF TIME BY MEANS OF FOLLOW UP EXAMINATIONS. THESE ARE USEFUL:

• STUDY THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE DISEASE.

• IDENTIFY THE RISK FACTORS.• DETERMINE THE INCIDENCE RATE.

Page 32: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• STUDY THE EFFECTS OF NEW INTERVENTIONS OR TRENDS OF BEHAVIOUR

Page 33: THE STUDY DESIGNS

CASE STUDY• A FORM OF SINGLE STUDY RESEARCH.• UNDERTAKEN ON AN INDIVIDUAL CASE WHICH IS TYPICAL FOR THE TARGETED CASES I.E. A CASE OF CONGENITAL ANAMOLY.• HISTORY OF EXPOSURE CAN BE TRACED.

Page 34: THE STUDY DESIGNS

FORMULATION OF HYPOYHESIS• AN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL HYPOTHESIS SHOULD

SPECIFY:• THE POPULATION: THE

CHARACTERISTICS OF PERSONS.• THE SPECIFIC CAUSE.• THE DISEASE.• THE DOSE RESPONSE RELATIONSHIP.• THE TIME RESPONSE RELATIONSHIP

Page 35: THE STUDY DESIGNS

EXAMPLES• CIGARETTE SMOKING CAUSES CA

LUNG.• THE SMOKING OF 30-40 CIGARETTES

PER DAY CAUSES LUNG CANCER IN 10 % OF SMOKERS AFTER 20 YEARS OF EXPOSURE

Page 36: THE STUDY DESIGNS

USES OF DESCRIPTIVE STUDIES

• PROVIDE DATA ABOUT DISEASE LOAD.• FORMULATION OF ETIOLOGICAL

HYPOTHESES.• DATA FOR PLANNING, EVALUATION OF

CURATIVE & PREVENTIVE SERVICES.• CONTRIBUTE TO RESEARCH.

Page 37: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ANALYTICAL STUDY DESIGNS

• THE SUBJECT OF INTEREST IN THE ANALYTICAL DESIGNS IS THE INDIVIDUAL RATHER THAN THE WHOLE POPULATION.

• THE AIM IS TO TEST ETIOLOGICAL HYPOTHESIS.

Page 38: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• TWO DISTINCT TYPES OFANALYTICAL STUDIES:1. CASE-CONTROL 2. COHORT

Page 39: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE CASE CONTROL STUDY

Page 40: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• OFTEN CALLED RETROSPECTIVE STUDIES.• IT IS BETTER NOT TO USE THIS TERM.• THE COMMON FEATURES:1. BOTH EXPOSURE & OUTCOME HAVE

OCCURRED.2. PROCEEDS BACKWARD FROM EFFECT TO

CAUSE.3. PRESENCE OF A CONTROL GROUP.

Page 41: THE STUDY DESIGNS

BASIC STEPS1. SELECTION OF THE CASES &

CONTROLS.2. MATCHING.3. MEASUREMENT OF EXPOSURE TO

THE VARIABLE UNDER INVESTIGATION.

4. ANALYSIS & INTERPRETATION

Page 42: THE STUDY DESIGNS

DESIGN OF A CASE CONTROL STUDY

Page 43: THE STUDY DESIGNS

SELECTION OF CASES &CONTROLS

• THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT STEP.• IT INVOLVES TWO SPECIFICATIONS:1. DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA:• SPECIFIC DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA OF THE

DISEASE, ITS STAGING ARE TO BE STATED CLEARLY.

Page 44: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: THE REQUIREMENT THAT ONLY NEWLY DIAGNOSED CASES RATHER THAN OLD ONES

Page 45: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE CHRONOLOGIC ORDER OF THE EXPOSURE AND DISEASE, WHICH IS EASY TO ELUCIDATE IN COHORT STUDIES, MAY BE UNCERTAIN FROM THE RESULTS OF A CASE–CONTROL STUDY BECAUSE IT MAY NOT BE POSSIBLE TO KNOW IF THE EXPOSURE OCCURRED BEFORE THE DISEASE.

Page 46: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• .FOR EXAMPLE, IF A CASE–CONTROL STUDY OF ASTHMA IN HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS DEMONSTRATES AN ASSOCIATION WITH CAT OWNERSHIP, • IT MAY BE DIFFICULT TO KNOW WHAT

HAPPENED FIRST:

Page 47: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE PRESENCE OF CATS OR THE FIRST ASTHMA ATTACK. ONE CAN OFTEN OVERCOME THIS PROBLEM BY INCLUDING ONLY NEWLY DIAGNOSED CASES

Page 48: THE STUDY DESIGNS

The sources of cases:1. Hospitals.2. The general populationThe selection of controls:The controls must be similar tocases as possible except for absence of disease underinvestigation.

Page 49: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE SOURCES OF CONTROLS ARE:1. HOSPITAL CONTROLS.2. RELATIVES.3. NEIGHBORHOOD CONTROLS.4. GENERAL POPULATION.

Page 50: THE STUDY DESIGNS

HOW MANY CONTROLS ARE NEEDED?GENERALLY ONE CONTROL IS NEEDED FOR EACH CASE. IF THE STUDY GROUP IS SMALL 2,3, OR EVEN 4 CONTROLS FOR EACH CASE IS POSSIBLE.

Page 51: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• MATCHING: • DEFINED AS THE PROCESS BY WHICH

WE SELECT CONTROLS IN SUCH A WAY THAT THEY ARE SIMILAR TO CASES WITH REGARDS TO CERTAIN VARIABLES(CONFOUNDING) TO ENSURE COMPARABILITY.

Page 52: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CASES & CONTROLS MAY DIFFER IN CHARACTERISTICS OR EXPOSURES OTHER THAN THE ONE TARGETED FOR THE STUDY.

MATCHING IS DONE EITHER AS: 1. GROUP MATCHING OR 2. 2. INDIVIDUAL

MATCHING(MATCHED PAIRS).

Page 53: THE STUDY DESIGNS

1. GROUP MATCHING(FREUENCY MATCHING)

• SELECTION OF CONTROLS IN SUCH A MANNER THAT THE PROPORTION OF CONTROLS WITH A CERTAIN CHARACTERISTICS IS IDENTICAL TO THE PROPORTION OF CASES WITH THE SAME CHARACTERISTIC.

• THUS IF 25% OF THE CASES ARE MARRIED, THE CONTROLS WILL BE SELECTED SO THAT 25% OF THE CONTROL IS ALSO MARRIED.

Page 54: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THIS REQUIRES THAT ALL CASES SELECTED FIRSTLY.• THEN CALCULATIONS OF THE

PROPORTIONS OF CERTAIN CHARACTERISTICS AMONG THE CASES. SELECTION OF A CONTROL GROUP WITH THE SAME PROPORTIONS IS MADE.

Page 55: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. INDIVIDUAL MATCHING(MATCHED PAIRS):

IN THIS APPROACH, FOR EACH CASE SELECTED FOR THE STUDY, A CONTROL SUBJECT IS SELECTED WHO IS SIMILAR TO THE CASE IN TERMS OF SPECIFIC VARIABLE OR VARIABLES OF CONCERN.

Page 56: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE PROBLEMS OF MATCHING:• OVERMATCHING• THE MATCHED CHARACTERISTICS

CAN NOT BE STUDIED.

Page 57: THE STUDY DESIGNS

NESTED CASE CONTROL

• SUPPOSE A PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY WERE CONDUCTED AMONG ALMOST 90,000 WOMEN FOR THE PURPOSE OF STUDYING THE DETERMINANTS OF CANCER AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE.

Page 58: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• AFTER ENROLLMENT, THE WOMEN PROVIDE BASELINE INFORMATION ON A HOST OF EXPOSURES, AND THEY ALSO PROVIDE BASELINE BLOOD AND URINE SAMPLES THAT ARE FROZEN FOR POSSIBLE FUTURE USE.

Page 59: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE WOMEN ARE THEN FOLLOWED, AND, AFTER ABOUT EIGHT YEARS, THE INVESTIGATORS WANT TO TEST THE HYPOTHESIS THAT PAST EXPOSURE TO PESTICIDES SUCH AS DDT IS A RISK FACTOR FOR BREAST CANCER.

• EIGHT YEARS HAVE PASSED SINCE THE BEGINNING OF THE STUDY, AND 1.439 WOMEN IN THE COHORT HAVE DEVELOPED BREAST CANCER

Page 60: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• . SINCE THEY FROZE BLOOD SAMPLES AT BASELINE, THEY HAVE THE OPTION OF ANALYZING ALL OF THE BLOOD SAMPLES IN ORDER TO ASCERTAIN EXPOSURE TO DDT AT THE BEGINNING OF THE STUDY BEFORE ANY CANCERS OCCURRED.

Page 61: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ONE COULD ANALYZE ALL OF THE BLOOD SAMPLES FROM WOMEN WHO HAD DEVELOPED BREAST CANCER, • BUT JUST ANALYZE A SAMPLE OF THE

NON-DISEASE WOMEN IN ORDER TO ESTIMATE THE EXPOSURE DISTRIBUTION IN THE POPULATION THAT PRODUCED THE CASES.

Page 62: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IN THIS SCENARIO THE POPULATION THAT PRODUCED THE CASES IN THE INITIAL COHORT OF 89,849 WOMEN. IF ONE WERE TO ANALYZE THE BLOOD SAMPLES OF 2,878 OF THE NON-DISEASED WOMEN (TWICE AS MANY AS THE NUMBER OF CASES)

Page 63: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 64: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IN ESSENCE, A CASE-CONTROL STRATEGY WAS USED, BUT IT WAS CONDUCTED WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF A PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY. THIS IS REFERRED TO AS A CASE-CONTROL STUDY "NESTED" WITHIN A COHORT STUDY.

Page 65: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 66: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 67: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ADVANTAGES:LESS EXPENSIVE THAN ANALYSISOF THE FULL COHORT• DISADVANTAGES:• NON-DISEASED PERSONS FROM WHOM

THE CONTROLS ARE SELECTED MAY NOT BE FULLY REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ORIGINAL COHORT DUE TO LOSS TO FOLLOW-UP OR DEATH

Page 68: THE STUDY DESIGNS

CASE COHORT STUDY

• IN THE CLASSIC NESTED CASE CONTROL STUDY CONTROLS ARE CHOSEN FROM SUBJECTS WHO DID NOT DEVELOP THE DISEASE IN THE CORRESPONDING CLOSED COHORT.

Page 69: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• AN ALTERNATIVE OPTION IS TO SELECT CONTROLS FROM THE MEMBERS OF THE ORIGINAL COHORT. THE RESULTING CASE CONTROL STUDY IS USUALLY REFERRED TO AS A CASE COHORT STUDY.•

Page 70: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE EXPOSURE ODDS AMONG THE SELECTED CONTROLS (B/D) SHOULD ESTIMATE THE EXPOSURE ODDS IN THE FULL COHORT (N1/N0).

Page 71: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• SINCE THE OUTCOMES IN A COHORT STUDY AT PART OF THE AT-RISK SUBJECTS AT THE START OF A STUDY, IT IS POSSIBLE DISEASE CASE MIGHT ALSO BE SELECTED AS A CONTROL IN A CASE COHORT STUDY.

Page 72: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THIS PRESENTS SOME PROBLEMS IN PERFORMING TESTS OF SIGNIFICANCE AND CONFIDENCE INTERVAL ESTIMATION, BUT DOES NOT INVALIDATE THE EXPOSURE ODDS RATIO FROM THE CASE COHORT STUDY ESTIMATING THE RISK RATIO FROM THE COHORT STUDY

Page 73: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ANALYSIS:1. THE EXPOSURE RATE AMONG BOTH THE

CASES AND THE CONTROLS.

2. ODDS RATIO:THIS RATIO CAN BE USED TO ESTIMATE THE RELATIVE RISK AS THE INCIDENCE RATE CAN NOT BE DETERMINED IN CASE-CONTROL STUDY DESIGN.

Page 74: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THUS THE CASE CONTROL STUDY IS ALWAYS SUGGESTIVE OF THE ETIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION BETWEEN TWO VARIABLES

Page 75: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IN EPIDEMIOLOGY, ODDS OF AN ATTRIBUTE CAN BE DEFINED AS THE RESULT OF DIVIDING THE PROPORTION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH AN ATTRIBUTE BY THE PROPORTION OF INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT THE ATTRIBUTE IN A POPULATION.

Page 76: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ODDS CAN BE INTERPRETED AS THE PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE OF AN EVENT AS COMPARED TO THE PROBABILITY OF NONOCCURRENCE OF AN EVENT IN A POPULATION.

Page 77: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CASE-CONTROL STUDY OF SMOKING & Ca LUNG

STATUS CASES CONTROLS

SMOKERS 33(a)

55(b)

NON-SMOKERS

2(c)

27(d)

TOTAL 35(a+c)

82(b+d)

Page 78: THE STUDY DESIGNS

1. The exposure rate among cases= a/a+c = 33/35= 0.94x100=94%

2. The exposure rate among the controls= b/b+d=55 /82= 0.67x100=67%.

Page 79: THE STUDY DESIGNS

3. ODDS OF EXPOSURE AMONG CASES=A/C=33/2=16.5

4. ODDS OF EXPOSURE AMONG CONTROLS=B/D=55/27=2.04

5. ODDS RATIO= A/C÷B/D = A/C X D/B=891÷110=8.1

Page 80: THE STUDY DESIGNS

INTERPRETATION: FROM THE EXPOSURE RATES AMONG THE CASES & CONTROLS:CHI SQUARE TEST HAS TO BE USED TO CONFIRM THAT THERE IS STATISTICAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO VALUES..

Page 81: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IF THE ODDS RATIO IS FOUND TO BE GREATER THAN ONE: POSITIVE ETIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

Page 82: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IF THE ODDS RATIO IS EQUAL TO 1: THERE IS NO ETIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION BETWEEN THE EXPOSURE AND THE OUTCOME.

Page 83: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IF THE ODDS RATIO IS LESS THAN ONE: THERE IS NEGATIVE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN THE EXPOSURE AND THE OUTCOME. IN SOME SITUATIONS THE EXPOSURE TO THE RISK FACTOR MIGHT BE PROTECTIVE FROM THE DISEASE.

Page 84: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 85: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ADVANTAGES OF CASE-CONTROL STUDIES

• APPROPRIATE FOR RARE DISEASES.

• RELATIVELY QUICK.

• RELATIVELY INEXPENSIVE.

Page 86: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• FEW SUBJECTS.• STUDY MANY POSSIBLE CAUSES OF A

SINGLE DISEASE.

Page 87: THE STUDY DESIGNS

DISADVANTAGES OF CASE-CONTROL STUDIES

• RECALL DEPENDENT: INFORMATION BIAS• INCOMPLETE CONTROL OF EXTERNAL FACTORS.• DIFFICULT TO SELECT CONTROLS.

Page 88: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CAN NOT CALCULATE INCIDENCE RATES.

• CAN NOT STUDY MECHANISMS OF DISEASE.

• IN PRACTICE, CASE–CONTROL STUDIES ARE OFTEN AFFECTED BY SELECTION BIAS

Page 89: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• SELECTION BIAS MAY BE PRESENT IF THE CONTROL GROUP DOES NOT COME FROM THE SAME POPULATION AS THE CASES.

Page 90: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• FOR EXAMPLE, IF CASES OF ASTHMA ARE DRAWN FROM A POPULATION OF HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS, AND CONTROLS WITHOUT ASTHMA ARE DRAWN FROM A POPULATION OF OLDER INDIVIDUALS WHO DO NOT ATTEND HIGH SCHOOL

Page 91: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ONE RISKS INTRODUCING A SERIOUS BIAS. • THIS REPRESENTS A PROBLEM BECAUSE

THE FACTORS RELATED TO ASTHMA ARE DIFFERENT IN YOUNG AND OLDER INDIVIDUALS. CONSEQUENTLY,

Page 92: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• MANY FACTORS THAT MIGHT BE FOUND TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH ASTHMA, BASED ON A STUDY OF SUCH MISMATCHED CASES AND CONTROLS, MIGHT RESULT MERELY FROM THE FACT THAT THESE TWO POPULATIONS ARE OF DIFFERENT AGE.

Page 93: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CASE CONTROL DESIGNS ARE NOT GENERALLY GOOD FOR STUDYING RARE EXPOSURES. • FOR EXAMPLE, IF WE WANT TO STUDY

THE RISK OF ASTHMA FROM WORKING IN A NUCLEAR SUBMARINE SHIPYARD,

Page 94: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• WE WOULD PROBABLY NOT DO A CASE CONTROL STUDY BECAUSE A VERY SMALL PROPORTION OF PEOPLE WITH ASTHMA WOULD HAVE BEEN EXPOSED TO SUCH A FACTOR.

Page 95: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CASE–CONTROL STUDIES CANNOT BE USED TO STUDY MULTIPLE DISEASES OR CONDITIONS BECAUSE IT IS NECESSARY TO GUARANTEE THAT THE CONTROL GROUP IS COMPARABLE FOR EACH DISEASE OR CONDITION SELECTED.

Page 96: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THEREFORE, IF ONE WANTS TO STUDY MORE THAN ONE DISEASE, NEW GROUPS OF CASES AND CONTROLS ARE NEEDED.

Page 97: THE STUDY DESIGNS

COHORT STUDY DESIGNS

Page 98: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IN COHORT STUDIES, THE INVESTIGATOR IDENTIFIES: • POPULATION FREE OF DISEASE (COHORT).

• DETERMINES THEIR EXPOSURE STATUS.

Page 99: THE STUDY DESIGNS

•FOLLOW OVER TIME TO DETERMINE THE OUTCOME IN BOTH EXPOSED AND NON-EXPOSED GROUPS.

• THE INFORMATION ON EXPOSURE IS OBTAINED BEFORE THE OBSERVATION OF THE DISEASE STATUS.

Page 100: THE STUDY DESIGNS

CONCEPT OF COHORT• COHORT IS A GROUP OF PEOPLE WHO SHARE A COMMON CHARACTERISTIC OR EXPERIENCE WITHIN A DEFINED PERIOD I.E. OCCUPATION,AGE, EXPOSURE TO DRUG OR VACCINE.

Page 101: THE STUDY DESIGNS

EXAMPLES:• THE DOCTORS GRADUATED IN 1996• THE FEMALE CHILDREN BORNE IN 1995• THE WORKERS APPOINTED IN

KHARTOUM NORTH ASBESTOS INDUSTRY IN 1960• ALL NURSING STAFF APPOINTED IN KTH

IN YEAR 2000

Page 102: THE STUDY DESIGNS

OPEN COHORTAN OPEN COHORT IS A DYNAMIC POPULATION WITH MIGRATION INTO AND OUT OF THE COHORT OCCURRING DURING THE FOLLOW-UP PERIOD.

Page 103: THE STUDY DESIGNS

SO THAT THE SAME SUBJECTS CAN CONTRIBUTE PERSON-TIME TO DIFFERENT EXPOSURE GROUPS.• EXPOSURE STATUS MAY CHANGE OVER

TIME

Page 104: THE STUDY DESIGNS

The following figure shows thegeneral features of an open cohort study.----D----------------------------------------------------D-----------------------------------D-------------------D--------------------------------------------- D_______________________________________Begi

nning End

Page 105: THE STUDY DESIGNS

CLOSED COHORT• A CLOSED COHORT HAS A COMMON

STARTING POINT AND FIXED POTENTIAL PERIOD OF FOLLOW-UP FOR ALL SUBJECTS. • FOR EXAMPLE, THE FRAMINGHAM

COHORT STUDY STARTED IN 1948. IT ENROLLED 5,209 SUBJECTS IN 1948 WITH THE PLAN TO FOLLOW ALL SUBJECTS FOR 20 YEARS..

Page 106: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• EXPOSURE IS DEFINED AT THE START OF THE FOLLOW-UP AND DOES NOT CHANGE OVER TIME. THERE ARE NO LOSSES-TO-FOLLOW-UP.

• THE OUTCOME MEASURE FOR SUCH COHORTS IS EITHER THE CUMULATIVE INCIDENCE OR THE INCIDENCE RATE

Page 107: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 108: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• A FIXED COHORT IS SIMILAR TO A CLOSED COHORT WITH THE EXCEPTION THAT THERE ARE SOME SUBJECTS WHO ARE LOST-TO-FOLLOW-UP.

• THE FRAMINGHAM HEART STUDY WITH THE OUTCOME OF ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY AND SEX AS AN EXPOSURE IS AN EXAMPLE OF A CLOSED COHORT AS THERE IS COMPLETE ASCERTAINMENT OF THIS OUTCOME ON ALL SUBJECTS

Page 109: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ON THE OTHER HAND, IF THE OUTCOME IS THE DEVELOPMENT OF CHD THEN IT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED AS A FIXED COHORT AS SOME SUBJECTS ARE LOST-TO-FOLLOW-UP AND THEIR SUBSEQUENT DEVELOPMENT OF CHD IS UNKNOWN..

Page 110: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ALSO, THERE ARE OTHER SUBJECTS WHO DIE FROM NON-CHD CAUSES (COMPETING RISK) AND THEREFORE ARE NO LONGER AT RISK FOR DEVELOPING CHD

Page 111: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE COMMON FEATURES OF COHORT STUDY DESIGNS

1. THE COHORTS ARE IDENTIFIED PRIOR TO THE APPEARANCE OF THE DISEASE UNDER INVESTIGATION.

Page 112: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. FOLLOW UP TO DETERMINE THE INCIDENCE OF THE DISEASE.

3. THE STUDY PROCEEDS FORWARDS FROM CAUSE TO EFFECT.

Page 113: THE STUDY DESIGNS

HOW CAN WE IDENTIFY THE COHORTS?

1. WE CAN CREATE A STUDY POPULATION THE BASIS OF WHETHER OR NOT THEY ARE EXPOSED.

Page 114: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. WE CAN SELECT A DEFINED POPULATION BEFORE ANY OF ITS MEMBERS BECOME EXPOSED OR BEFORE THEIR EXPOSURES ARE IDENTIFIED.

Page 115: THE STUDY DESIGNS

DESIGN OF A COHORT STUDY

Page 116: THE STUDY DESIGNS

INDICATIONS OF COHORT STUDIES

1. WHEN THERE IS STRONG SUSPICION BETWEEN EXPOSURE AND DISEASE.2. WHEN THE EXPOSURE IS RARE BUT INCIDENCE IS HIGH AMONG EXPOSED.

Page 117: THE STUDY DESIGNS

3. WHEN ATTRITION OF THE STUDY GROUPS CAN BE MINIMIZED.

4. WHEN AMPLE FUNDS ARE AVAILABLE

Page 118: THE STUDY DESIGNS

TYPES OF COHORT STUDIES

1. CONCURRENT PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY.THE INVESTIGATOR IDENTIFIES THE ORIGINAL POPULATION AT THE BEGINNING OF THE STUDY AND THEN FOLLOW TILL THE DISEASE APPEARS.

.

Page 119: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. RETROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY.THE COHORTS IDENTIFIED FROM PREVIOUS RECORDS & THEN DIVIDED IN TO EXPOSED AND NON-EXPOSED, THEN DECIDE WHO DEVELOPS AND WHO DOES NOT DEVELOP THE DISEASE.

Page 120: THE STUDY DESIGNS

3. RETROSPECTIVE-PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY.•THE COHORTS IDENTIFIED FROM PREVIOUS RECORDS.• DIVIDED INTO EXPOSED AND NON-EXPOSED. • FOLLOW UP OVER A PERIOD OF TIME TO DETERMINE THE INCIDENCE OF THE DISEASE

Page 121: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 122: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ELEMENTS OF A COHORT STUDY

1. SELECTION OF THE STUDY SUBJECTS.2. OBTAINING DATA ON EXPOSURE3. SELECTION OF COMPARISON GROUPS.4. FOLLOW UP.5. ANALYSIS.6. INTERPRETATION.

Page 123: THE STUDY DESIGNS

SELECTION OF STUDY SUBJECTSTHE STUDY SUBJECTS CAN BE OBTAINED FROM:• FROM THE GENERAL POPULATION IF THE EXPOSURE & THE OUTCOME IS FREQUENT.• FROM THE SPECIAL GROUPS IF THE EXPOSURE AND THE OUTCOME IS LESS FREQUENT.

Page 124: THE STUDY DESIGNS

OBTAINING DATA ON EXPOSURE

THE DATA ON EXPOSURE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM:• THE COHORT MEMBERS.• REVIEW OF DOCUMENTS.• MEDICAL EXAMINATION OR SPECIAL TESTS.• ENVIRONMENTAL SURVEYS.

Page 125: THE STUDY DESIGNS

SELECTION OF COMPARISON GROUPS

THE COMPARISON GROUPS CAN BE OBTAINED FROM:• THE MEMBERS OF THE SAME COHORT AS DIVIDED INTO EXPOSED AND NON-EXPOSED.

Page 126: THE STUDY DESIGNS

•EXTERNAL GROUP I.E. NON-SMOKERS.• GENERAL POPULATION FROM WHICH THE COHORT IS DERIVED

Page 127: THE STUDY DESIGNS

FOLLOW UPTHE FOLLOWING PROCEDURES ARE REQUIRED FOR FOLLOW UP:• PERIODIC MEDICAL EXAMINATION.• REVIEW OF THE PHYSICIAN,S AND HOSPITAL RECORDS.

Page 128: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ROUTINE SURVEILLANCE OF THE DEATH RECORDS.• MAILED AND E-MAILED QUESTIONNAIRES, TELEPHONE CALLS, PERIODIC HOME VISITS ON ANNUAL BASIS.

Page 129: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ANALYSIS

The collected data will be analyzed in terms of:• Incidence rate of disease among both exposed & non-exposed.• Estimation of risk.

Page 130: THE STUDY DESIGNS

RELATIVE RISK: THIS IS THE RATIO THAT MEASURES THE STRENGTH OF ASSOCIATION BETWEEN SUSPECTED CAUSE AND EFFECT.THE RR IS A MEASURE OF THERELATIVE MAGNITUDE OF THEINCIDENCE IN THE EXPOSED ANDTHE INCIDENCE IN THENONEXPOSED.

Page 131: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• RR = 1 MEANS THAT THE INCIDENCE IN THE EXPOSED IS THE SAME AS THE INCIDENCE IN THE NON-EXPOSED, AND SO THERE IS NO EVIDENT ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EXPOSURE AND DISEASE.

Page 132: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• RR > 1 DENOTES A LARGER INCIDENCE IN THE EXPOSED THAN THE NONEXPOSED. • THUS EXPOSURE TO THE FACTOR SEEMS

TO INCREASE THE PROBABILITY OF DEVELOPING THE DISEASE.

Page 133: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• WITH THE SAME REASONING, RR < 1 DENOTES A SMALLER INCIDENCE IN THE EXPOSED AS COMPARED TO THE NONEXPOSED. • THUS EXPOSURE TO THE FACTOR SEEMS

TO DECREASE THE PROBABILITY OF DEVELOPING THE DISEASE.

Page 134: THE STUDY DESIGNS
Page 135: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ATTRIBUTABLE RISK:• THIS IS THE DIFFERENCE IN INCIDENCE OF DISEASE OR DEATH BETWEEN EXPOSED & NON-EXPOSED GROUP.

• IT IS EXPRESSED AS %.

Page 136: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IT MEASURES THE IMPACT THAT REMOVAL OF A CERTAIN FACTOR WILL HAVE ON THE INCIDENCE OF THE DISEASE.

Page 137: THE STUDY DESIGNS

SMOKING & CA LUNG-COHORT STUDY

Smoking status

Developed Ca lung

Did not develop Ca

lung

Total

Yes 70 (a)

6930 (b)

7000 (a+b)

No 3 ©

2997 (d)

3000 (c+d)

Page 138: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• INCIDENCE RATE OF CA LUNG AMONG SMOKERS= A/A+B=70/7000= 10/1000

• INCIDENCE RATE OF CA LUNG AMONG NON-SMOKERS= C/C+D= 3/3000= 1/1000

Page 139: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• RELATIVE RISK= INCIDENCE OF DISEASE AMONG

EXPOSED/INCIDENCE AMONG NON-EXPOSED= 10/1=10.

Page 140: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• ATTRIBUTABLE RISK “EXCESS RISK FOR THE EXPOSED GROUP COMPARED WITH THE NON-EXPOSED GROUP= INCIDENCE RATE AMONG EXPOSED-INCIDENCE RATE AMONG NON-EXPOSED/INCIDENCE RATE AMONG EXPOSED= 10-1x100=90%

Page 141: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ADVANTAGES OF COHORT STUDIES

• COMPLETE DATA ON CASES & STAGES.• STUDY OF MORE THAN ONE EFFECT OF EXPOSURE.• CALCULATE & COMPARE RATES IN EXPOSED & NON-EXPOSE.• QUALITY CONTROL OF DATA

Page 142: THE STUDY DESIGNS

DISADVANTAGES OF COHORT STUDIES

• NEED LARGE NUMBERS• MANY YEARS.• CHANGES OF CIRCUMSTANCES.• EXPENSIVE.• INCOMPLETE CONTROL OF EXTERNAL FACTORS.• ATTRITION

Page 143: THE STUDY DESIGNS

EXPERIMENTAL STUDY DESIGNS

Page 144: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IN EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, THE STUDY SUBJECTS ARE OBSERVED UNDER PREDETERMINED CONDITIONS USING CAREFULLY DESIGNED APPROACHES TO DATA & SPECIMENS.

Page 145: THE STUDY DESIGNS

•THE EXPERIMENTAL STUDY DESIGNS DIFFER FROM THE ANALYTICAL STUDY DESIGNS:• THE CONDITIONS IN WHICH THE STUDY IS CARRIED ARE UNDER DIRECT CONTROL OF THE INVESTIGATOR.

Page 146: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES INVOLVE SOME ACTION OR INTERVENTION OR MANIPULATION IN THE EXPERIMENT GROUP WHILE MAKING NO CHANGE IN THE CONTROL GROUP.

Page 147: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IN ANALYTICAL STUDIES, NO ACTION BUT ONLY OBSERVATION OF THE NATURAL COURSE OF EVENTS OR OUTCOMES.

Page 148: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE AIMS OF EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES:1. TO PROVIDE SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE OF ETIOLOGICAL OR RISK FACTORS TO PERMIT MODIFICATION OR CONTROL OF DISEASE.

Page 149: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. TO PROVIDE A METHOD OF MEASURING THE EFFECTIVENESS OR EFFICIENCY OF THE HEALTH SERVICES FOR PREVENTION, CONTROL & TREATMENT OF DISEASE AND TO IMPROVE THE HEALTH OF THE COMMUNITY.

Page 150: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE DISADVANTAGES OF THE EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES:

• They are costly.• Ethical problems.• Feasibility.

Page 151: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE FEATURES OF THE EXPERIMENTAL STUDY DESIGNS:

• RANDOM ALLOCATION OF INDIVIDUALS TO EXPERIMENTAL & CONTROL GROUPS.

• SYSTEMATIC MANIPULATION OF THE EXPERIMENTAL GROUP.

Page 152: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CONTROL OVER THE OTHER IMPORTANT FACTORS AFFECTING EXPERIMENTAL & CONTROL GROUPS.

• MEASUREMENT OF SOME OUTCOME VARIABLES WITH WHICH TO COMPARE TWO GROUPS.

Page 153: THE STUDY DESIGNS

TYPES OF EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES:1. RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIALS:THOSE INVOLVED A PROCESS OF RANDOM ALLOCATION..

Page 154: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. NON-RANDOMIZED TRIALS: THOSE DEPARTING FROM STRICT RANDOMIZATION FOR PRACTICAL PURPOSES BUT IN SUCH A MANNER THAT NON-RANDOMIZATION DOES NOT SERIOUSLY AFFECT THE THEORETICAL BASIS OF CONCLUSIONS

Page 155: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE QUASI-EXPERIMENTAL STUDY DESIGNS:

IN THIS DESIGN THE CONTROL OVER THE EXTERNAL FACTORS IS NOT POSSIBLE AND THIS MIGHT ALTER THE OUTCOME VARIABLES.

Page 156: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS

THOSE TRIALS ARE USED FOR ASSESSMENT OF METHODS OF TREATMENT AND PREVENTION.

Page 157: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE BASIC STEPS IN CONDUCT OF RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS:1. DRAWING A PROTOCOL.2. SELECTING REFERENCE & EXPERIMENTAL POPULATION.3. RANDOMIZATION.4. MANIPULATION OR INTERVENTION

Page 158: THE STUDY DESIGNS

5. FOLLOW UP.6. ASSESSMENT OF THE OUTCOME.

Page 159: THE STUDY DESIGNS

DESIGN OF A RANDOMIZED CLINICAL CONTROL TRIAL

Page 160: THE STUDY DESIGNS

THE PROTOCL • ONE OF THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES OF THE

RANDOMIZED TRIALS.• THE PROTOCOL SPECIFIES:1. THE OBJECTIVES.2. THE SELECTION CRITERIA.3. THE SAMPLE SIZE.4. THE PROCEDURES OF ALLOCATION OF THE

SUBJECTS INTO EXPERIMENTAL AND CONTROL GROUPS.

Page 161: THE STUDY DESIGNS

6. THE TREATMENT APPLIED:HOW, WHERE AND TO WHAT TYPES OF PATIENTS.7. THE DETAILS OF THE SCIENTIFIC TECHNIQUES AND INVESTIGATIONS. Once a protocol has been evolved, it should be strictly adhered to throughout the study.

Page 162: THE STUDY DESIGNS

SELECTION OF THE REFERENCE & THE EXPERIMENTAL POPULATIONS

• THE REFERENCE POPULATION:• IT IS THE POPULATION TO WHICH THE FINDINGS OF THE TRIAL, IF FOUND TO BE SUCCESSFUL, ARE EXPECTED TO BE APPLICABLE.

Page 163: THE STUDY DESIGNS

•THE EXPERIMENTAL POPULATION:• THE EXPERIMENTAL (STUDY) POPULATION IS DERIVED FROM THE REFERENCE POPULATION.• IT IS THE ACTUAL POPULATION THAT PARTICIPATES IN THE EXPERIMENTAL STUDY.

Page 164: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IT SHOULD BE RANDOMLY SELECTED FROM THE REFERENCE POPULATION.

Page 165: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IF THE STUDY POPULATION DIFFERS FROM THE REFERENCE POPULATION, IT MAY NOT BE POSSIBLE TO GENERALIZE THE FINDINGS TO THE REFERENCE POPULATION.

Page 166: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE PARTICIPANTS OR THE VOLUNTEERS OF THE EXPERIMENT MUST FULFILL THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA:• THEY MUST GIVE INFORMED CONSENT.

Page 167: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THEY SHOULD BE REPRESENTATIVE OF THE REFERENCE POPULATION.

•THEY SHOULD BE ELIGIBLE OR QUALIFIED FOR THE TRIAL

Page 168: THE STUDY DESIGNS

RANDOMIZATION:• RANDOMIZATION IS THE STATISTICAL PROCEDURE BY WHICH THE PARTICIPANTS ARE ALLOCATED INTO GROUPS USUALLY CALLED STUDY & CONTROL GROUPS TO RECEIVE OR NOT TO RECEIVE AN EXPERIMENTAL OR THERAPEUTIC PROCEDURE OR INTERVENTION.

Page 169: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• RANDOMIZATION AIMS TO MAKE THE GROUPS COMPARABLE.

Page 170: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• RANDOMIZATION ENSURES THAT THE INVESTIGATOR HAS NO CONTROL OVER THE ALLOCATION OF THE PARTICIPANTS TO EITHER THE STUDY OR CONTROL GROUP, THUS ELIMINATING THE SELECTION BIAS.

Page 171: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• EVERY INDIVIDUAL HAS AN EQUAL CHANCE OF BEING ALLOCATED INTO EITHER GROUP.

• RANDOMIZATION IS BEST DONE BY USING STATISTICAL RANDOM TABLE.

Page 172: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE ESSENTIAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A RANDOMIZED TRIAL AND ANALYTICAL STUDY IS THAT:• IN THE LATTER THERE IS NO RANDOMIZATION BECAUSE DIFFERENTIATION INTO CASES & CONTROLS EXPOSED AND NON-EXPOSED GROUPS HAS ALREADY TAKEN PLACE.

Page 173: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THUS THE ONLY OPTION LEFT TO ENSURE COMPARABILITY IN ANALYTICAL STUDIES IS BY MATCHING.

Page 174: THE STUDY DESIGNS

MANIPULATION:MANIPULATION OR INTERVENTION IS USUALLY DONE BY APPLICATION OR WITHDRAWAL OF THE SUSPECTED FACTOR E.G. DRUGS, VACCINE OR DIETARY FACTOR..

Page 175: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THIS MANIPULATION CREATES AN INDEPENDENT VARIABLE (DRUG, VACCINE OR NEW PROCEDURE) WHOSE EFFECT IS THEN DETERMINED BY THE MEASUREMENT OF THE FINAL OUTCOME WHICH CONSTITUTES THE DEPENDENT VARIABLE E.G. INCIDENCE OF DISEASE, RECOVERY

Page 176: THE STUDY DESIGNS

FOLLOW UP:THIS INCLUDES EXAMINATION OF THE STUDY & CONTROL GROUPS SUBJECTS AT DEFINED INTERVALS OF TIME IN STANDARD MANNER UNDER THE SAME CONDITIONS IN THE SAME TIME FRAME TILL THE FINAL ASSESSMENT.

Page 177: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE MAIN DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED IN THE FOLLOW UP PROCESS INCLUDE:• ATTRITION, DEATH, MIGRATION,

DISPLACEMENT AND LOSS OF INTEREST.

Page 178: THE STUDY DESIGNS

ASSESSMENTTHE FINAL ASSESSMENT OF THE TRIAL IS CARRIED IN TERMS OF:• POSITIVE RESULTS: THESE INCLUDE THE BENEFITS OF THE EXPERIMENTAL STUDY SUCH AS REDUCED INCIDENCE OF THE DISEASE OR SEVERITY OF THE DISEASE, COST OF HEALTH SERVICES OR OTHER APPROPRIATE OUTCOME.•

Page 179: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• NEGATIVE RESULTS: THESE INCLUDE THE SEVERITY & FREQUENCY OF SIDE-EFFECTS AND COMPLICATIONS.• THE INCIDENCE OF

POSITIVE/NEGATIVE RESULTS IS COMPARED IN BOTH GROUPS AND THE DIFFERENCES ARE TESTED STATISTICALLY.

Page 180: THE STUDY DESIGNS

BIAS Bias is the systematic difference between observed results and the actual results.Sources of bias:1. Participant’s bias:The participants report subjectively that they feel better or improved if they knew that they were receiving new treatment.

Page 181: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2.OBSERVER’S BIAS: THE INFLUENCE OF THE INVESTIGATOR MEASURING THE OUTCOME OF THE TRIAL IF HE KNEW BEFOREHAND THE PARTICULAR PROCEDURE TO WHICH THE PATIENT HAS BEEN SUBJECTED.

Page 182: THE STUDY DESIGNS

3. THERE MAY BE BIAS IN EVALUATION AS THE INVESTIGATOR MAY INVOLUNTARILY GIVE FAVORABLE REPORT OF THE OUTCOME OF THE STUDY.

Page 183: THE STUDY DESIGNS

HOW TO REDUCE THE SOURCES OF BIAS?1. RANDOMIZATION. 2. BLINDING.

Page 184: THE STUDY DESIGNS

BLINDING IS CARRIED IN THREE WAYS:1. SINGLE BLIND TRIAL:THE TRIAL IS SO

PLANNED THAT THE PARTICIPANT IS NOT AWARE WHETHER HE BELONGS TO THE STUDY OR CONTROL GROUP.

Page 185: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2. DOUBLE BLIND TRIAL: THE TRIAL IS SO PLANNED THAT NETHER THE DOCTOR NOR THE PARTICIPANT IS AWARE OF THE GROUP ALLOCATION AND TREATMENT RECEIVED.

Page 186: THE STUDY DESIGNS

3. TRIPLE-BLIND TRIAL: • THE TRIAL IS SO PLANNED THAT THE

PARTICIPANT, THE INVESTIGATOR& THE PERSON ANALYZING THE DATA ARE ALL BLIND. THIS IS THE IDEAL BUT DOUBLE-BLINDING IS THE MOST COMMONLY USED.

Page 187: THE STUDY DESIGNS

TYPES OF RANDOMIZED TRIALS:1. CLINICAL TRIALS:THESE TRIALS CONCERNED WITH EVALUATING THE EFFICACY OF NEW DRUGS OR OTHER THERAPEUTIC PROCEDURES SUCH AS SURGERY, PHYSIOTHERAPY AND IONIZING RADIATION.

.

Page 188: THE STUDY DESIGNS

2.Preventive trials:

•IN GENERAL THE TERM PREVENTIVE TRIALS IMPLIES TRIALS OF PRIMARY PREVENTIVE MEASURES.

•THE TRIALS ARE DESIGNED TO PREVENT OR ELIMINATE DISEASE ON AN EXPERIMENTAL BASIS.

Page 189: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE MOST FREQUENTLY OCCURRING TYPE OF PREVENTIVE TRIALS ARE THE TRIALS OF VACCINES AND CHEMO PROPHYLAXIS.

Page 190: THE STUDY DESIGNS

DESIGN OF A RANDOMIZED PREVENTIVE CONTROL TRIAL

Page 191: THE STUDY DESIGNS

PHASES OF CLINICAL TRIALS• A PRPOERLY PLANNED AND

IMPLEMENTED CLINICAL TRIAL IS A POWERFUL TECHNIQUE FOR ASSESSING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF AN INTERVENTION

Page 192: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• A CLINICAL TRIAL IS A PROSPECTIVE STUDY COMPARING THE EFFECT OF INTERVENTION(S) AGAINST A CONTROL IN HUMAN BEINGS

• A CLINICAL TRIAL IS PROSPECTIVE RATHER THAN RETROSPECTIVE

Page 193: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• STUDY PARTICIPANTS MUST BE FOLLOWED FOREWARD IN TIME.

• FOLLOW UP OF THE STUDY SUBJECTS OVERTIME WITHOUT ACTIVE INTERVENTION MAY MEASURE THE NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE BUT THIS IS NOT A CLINICAL TRIAL

Page 194: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• CLINICAL TRIALS HAVE SEVERAL STEPS:• PHASE (1): • THE FIRST STEP OR PHASE IS TO

UNDERSTAND HOW WELL THE INTERVENTION CAN BE TOLERATED IN A SMALL NUMBER OF INDIVIDUALS

Page 195: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IT DOES NOT MEET THE STANDARD DEFINITION OF A CLINICAL TRIAL.

• MOST PHASE 1 DESIGNS ARE RELATIVELY SIMPLE.

Page 196: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• EVALUATING DRUGS, NEEDS FIRST STEP IS TO ESTIMATE HOW A DOSE CAN BE ADMINISTERED BEFORE UNACCEPABLE TOXICITY IS EXPERIENCED BY PATIENTS.

• THIS DOSE IS USUALLY CALLED MAXIMALLY TOLERATED DOSE MTD

Page 197: THE STUDY DESIGNS

PHASE 11 TRIALS:• ONCE THE MTD IS ESTABLISHED: THE

NEXT STEP IS TO EVALUATE WHETHER THE DRUG HAS ANY BIOLOGICAL EFFECT AND TO ESTIMATE THE RATE OF ADVERSE EFFECTS.

Page 198: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IF THE DESIGN OF PHASE 1 HAS NOT BEEN ADEQUATE, THE INVESTIGATOR MAY EVALUATE THE DOSE.

• PHASE 11 DESIGN DEPENDS ON THE QUALITY OF ADEQUACY OF PHASE 1

Page 199: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• THE DESIGN USUALLY ENCOUNTERS A LIMITED NUMBER OF PATIENTS 14 AND THEN THE RESPONSE RATE IS ESTIMATED

Page 200: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• IF THE RESPONSE RATE IS LESS THAN THE 20%: THE DRUG IS OMITTED.

• IF THE RESPONES IS GREATER THAN 20%: MORE PATIENTS ARE RECRUITED ACCORDING TO THE PRECISION DESIRED: USUALLY 10-20

Page 201: THE STUDY DESIGNS

PHASE 111/1V:• THESE ARE CLINICAL TRIALS AS DEFINED.

• PHASE 111 TRIALS HAVE A SHORT PERIOD OF EVALUATION

• FOCUS ON EFFECTIVENESS BUT KNOWLEDGE ON SAFETY IS ALSO NECESSARY

Page 202: THE STUDY DESIGNS

• LONG-TERM STUDIES WHICH DO NOT INVOLVE CONTROL GROUPS TO EVALUATE PROPERLY THE PROPER ROLE OF AN INTERVENTION: ARE CALLED PHASE 1V TRIALS