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Initiation and continuation of randomized trials after the publication of a trial stopped early for benefit asking the same study question: STOPIT-3 study design
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 3704647
Author(s) Prutsky, Gabriela J.; Domecq, Juan Pablo; Erwin, Patricia J.; Briel, Matthias; Montori, Victor M.; Akl, Elie A.; Meerpohl, Joerg J.; Bassler, Dirk; Schandelmaier, Stefan; Walter, Stephen D.; Zhou, Qi; Coello, Pablo Alonso; Moja, Lorenzo; Walter, Martin; Thorlund, Kristian; Glasziou, Paul; Kunz, Regina; Ferreira-Gonzalez, Ignacio; Busse, Jason; Sun, Xin; Kristiansen, Annette; Kasenda, Benjamin; Qasim-Agha, Osama; Pagano, Gennaro; Pardo-Hernandez, Hector; Urrutia, Gerard; Murad, Mohammad Hassan; Guyatt, Gordon
Author(s) at UniBasel Kasenda, Benjamin
Kunz, Regina
Year 2013
Title Initiation and continuation of randomized trials after the publication of a trial stopped early for benefit asking the same study question: STOPIT-3 study design
Journal Trials
Volume 14
Pages / Article-Number 335
Keywords *Early Termination of Clinical Trials/ethics; *Evidence-Based Medicine/ethics; Humans; Information Dissemination; *Periodicals as Topic; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic/ethics/*methods; *Research Design; Time Factors
Mesh terms Early Termination of Clinical Trials, ethics; Evidence-Based Medicine, ethics; Humans; Information Dissemination; Periodicals as Topic; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, methods; Research Design; Time Factors
Abstract Randomized control trials (RCTs) stopped early for benefit (truncated RCTs) are increasingly common and, on average, overestimate the relative magnitude of benefit by approximately 30%. Investigators stop trials early when they consider it is no longer ethical to enroll patients in a control group. The goal of this systematic review is to determine how investigators of ongoing or planned RCTs respond to the publication of a truncated RCT addressing a similar question.; We will conduct systematic reviews to update the searches of 210 truncated RCTs to identify similar trials ongoing at the time of publication, or started subsequently, to the truncated trials ('subsequent RCTs'). Reviewers will determine in duplicate the similarity between the truncated and subsequent trials. We will analyze the epidemiology, distribution, and predictors of subsequent RCTs. We will also contact authors of subsequent trials to determine reasons for beginning, continuing, or prematurely discontinuing their own trials, and the extent to which they rely on the estimates from truncated trials.; To the extent that investigators begin or continue subsequent trials they implicitly disagree with the decision to stop the truncated RCT because of an ethical mandate to administer the experimental treatment. The results of this study will help guide future decisions about when to stop RCTs early for benefit.
Publisher BioMed Central
ISSN/ISBN 1745-6215
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/53540/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1186/1745-6215-14-335
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24131702
ISI-Number WOS:000328746700001
Document type (ISI) Journal Article, Review
 
   

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14/05/2024