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Literature Evaluation

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Title: Literature Evaluation


1
Literature Evaluation
  • Types and Quality of Medical Literature
  • Study Design

2
Types of Drug Resources- Tertiary
  • Tertiary Sources
  • Compendia (Facts and Comparisons, textbooks,
    Micromedex, review and meta-analysis articles)
  • Advantages convenient, easy to use, quick
    access, compact information, general overviews
  • Disadvantages incomplete, outdated, contains
    most human bias, lack of expertise and evidence.

3
Types of Resources Secondary
  • Indexing and abstracting services (Medline)
  • Use to locate primary drug literature resources
  • Advantages easy access to primary resources
  • Disadvantage cost, some only have indexing or
    abstracting available

4
Types of Resources Primary
  • Articles in journals about original research or
    case reports of actual drug trials/studies.
  • Advantages Provides significant detail of drug
    knowledge, research methodology, scientific
    results allowing the reader to evaluate the drug
    in the most non-biased and scientifically based
    way.
  • Most current, most unbiased, used for therapeutic
    decisions (actual research data).

5
Types of Literature ArticlesTertiary Resource
  • Review articles-- tertiary resource articles (not
    primary)
  • Purpose to review a drug in a monograph form or
    in a literature search format where many articles
    are reviewed, clinical studies are looked at and
    conclusions are made that reflect the current
    thinking on a given subject or drug.
  • Advantages Excellent beginning resource to
    locate information about a particular subject.
    Rapid access to large amount of information.

6
Types of Literature Articles.Tertiary Resource
  • Systematic Review
  • Summarizes scientific evidencereviews multiple
    studies
  • One or more questions/hypotheses posed at start
    of review
  • Studies are collected to review, data is
    extracted and combined/compared Or, if data
    cannot be combined, strength of evidence is
    assessed and used to evaluate results.
  • Conclusions are made based on results and
    presence or absence of supporting evidence.

7
Types of Literature ArticlesTertiary Resource
  • Meta-Analysis studies tertiary resource
    information.
  • A quantitative or statistical method of combining
    the results of independent studies (usually drawn
    from published literature) and synthesizing
    summaries and conclusions, statistically, which
    may be used to evaluate therapeutic
    effectiveness, plan new studies, etc.
  • Used when measuring very small effects, to
    resolve conflict or inconclusive results among
    studies, or to evaluate objectives not posed at
    the beginning of the study.
  • Always has statistical evidence present.
  • Always a retrospective evaluation of collected
    data.

8
Types of Literature Articles in Medical Journals
  • Pharmacokinetic studies
  • To estimate
  • the drugs pharmacokinetic parameters, such as
    volume of distribution, metabolism, elimination.
  • bioavailability or bioequivalence of drugs or
    dosage forms.
  • Drug interactions (food, drug, genetics)
  • Common in phase I or II clinical trials
  • animal or human studies (small s, healthy
    volunteers, not placebo controlled, not blinded,
    not randomized)

9
Types of Literature Articles in Medical
Journals...
  • Pharmacodynamic Studies
  • To evaluate drug concentration-effect
    relationships (if drug conc. Produce a
    therapeutic or toxic effect)
  • Can be animal or human studies (small s,
    healthy volunteers, not blinded, not randomized,
    not placebo controlled)
  • Common place Pre-clinical and phase I trials.
    Often combined with pharmacokinetic studies.

10
Types of Literature Articles
  • Pharmacoeconomic Studies
  • Studies identifying cost effectiveness for a
    given dosage regimen, disease state, or drug
    therapy
  • Provides additional information about the
    potential impact of a drugs clinical use.
  • Example A Study comparing the cost effectiveness
    of tricyclic antidepressants with the newer SSRI
    antidepressants in regards to actual pill costs
    and overall mental health care costs
    (hospitalizations, compliance with medication,
    longer term side effects, etc.)
  • Common place phase IV trials

11
Types of Literature Articles...
  • Clinical Methodology Studies
  • Development of new methods compared to the
    current standards.
  • Example A study to estimate the predictive
    performance of a new instrument, sensitivity and
    specificity of a diagnostic test or validation of
    a new drug dosing regimen.
  • Purpose to look for more convenient, less
    expensive or less invasive means of making
    measurements.

12
Types of Literature Articles...
  • Pharmacoepidemiologic Studies
  • These studies evaluate the use and effects of
    drugs in large numbers of people. Used to assess
    drug use patterns and to document clinical
    efficacy and toxicity of drugs.
  • Have led to the discovery of uncommon, but
    serious side effects of drugs, leading to their
    withdrawal from the marketplace.
  • Most common type of design cohort, case-control.
  • Common place phase IV trials

13
Types of Literature Articles.
  • Quality of Life Studies
  • performed to evaluate the functional effects,
    beneficial or adverse effects that a drug or
    treatment regimen may have on a patient and their
    quality of life.
  • Used to assess treatments that have minimal
    effects, to evaluate a drug in a disease state
    where few effective therapies exist, or to
    differentiate between drugs of the same class.
  • Most often in phase IV trials.

14
Editorial Board
  • Editorial boards are made up of people with
    expertise to critique the type of manuscript
    submitted for publication.
  • Editorial board members
  • Advise the editor about the suitability of
    submitted manuscripts
  • Assist the editor in setting journal policy

15
Peer Review
  • Experts in their field, asked to review, critique
    manuscripts before approval for publication.
  • Most journals do not identify peer reviewers for
    specific articles.
  • Peer reviewers may or may not be part of the
    editorial board.

16
Peer Review
  • How to tell if journal article has been peer
    reviewed
  • 1. Look in Guidelines for submitting
    manuscripts. This will tell you how many copies
    of their manuscript they need to send in, and
    will often indicate if peer review is used. (If
    more than 2 copies, assume it is peer reviewed)

17
Peer Review.
  • 2. Check either the bottom of the first page or
    the last page of the published study. Some
    journals will print the date they received a
    manuscript, the date it was revised and the date
    it was accepted for publication. The use of peer
    review will often mean that 3 months or more have
    lapsed from the time a manuscript is received by
    the journal to the time it is accepted for
    publication.

18
Peer Review.
  • 3. If the manuscript has been revised, it
    usually means it has been peer reviewed and the
    author has been asked to make changes.
  • 4. Some journals will put a special symbol in
    the side margins or at the end of those articles
    that have been through the peer review process.

19
Advertising in Journals
  • The amount of advertising (ads for specific
    drugs, books, equipment, etc) varies from journal
    to journal, and ranges from none to the majority
    of the contents.
  • Advertising does not in itself affect the quality
    of a journal, but it does lower the cost of the
    journal for its readership.

20
Controlled Circulation
  • Several journals are distributed free of charge,
    with their cost entirely absorbed by advertisers.
  • These journals focus on a specific target
    audience (community practitioners, retail RPh,
    etc) and distribution is targeted to these
    individuals. This method of targeting is called
    controlled circulation.
  • Controlled circulation journals usually do not
    contain comprehensive research or clinical
    studies.
  • They can provide topic overviews of interest as
    review articles.

21
Citations
  • Citations (references) indicate the author has
    researched the subject and has used previous
    published work as a guide to this research.
  • Caution- Sometimes an author will cite his own
    work from a previously written article on the
    same/similar work-- can create bias and lower the
    quality of the reference

22
Review of Clinical Trial Phases
  • Phase I to identify preferred route, safe dosage
    range, toxicity, pharmacokinetics. Uses healthy
    volunteers w/ no pre-existing conditions. Uses
    low dosages.
  • Phase II to evaluate efficacy in subjects with
    proposed disease state identify group most
    likely to benefit from drug.

23
Review of Drug Trial Phases
  • Phase III Compare to current therapy,
    multicenter studies, serve as basis for NDA,
    large numbers of patients tested.
  • Phase IV Post marketing surveillance studies, to
    look for side effects, new indications, new
    dosages, long term effects, drug interactions in
    defined populations.

24
Drug Study Design
25
Purpose of a Study Design
  • To answer a research question.
  • The research design determines what can be
    concluded from a particular study and the amount
    of inference required to interpret the data.
  • Research design influences the selection of the
    statistical procedures used to analyze and
    interpret results.

26
Research Design
  • Organized around three general concepts
  • Description
  • Analysis
  • Evaluation
  • 2 basic types of medical research studies
  • Observational
  • Experimental

27
Hierarchy of Research Design
  • Lowest levels of evidence
  • Descriptive
  • Cross Sectional
  • Case-Control
  • Higher levels of evidence
  • Cohort
  • Highest levels of evidence
  • Experimental (randomized controlled study)

28
Types of Medical Studies...
  • Observational
  • prospective (happening in present and future)
  • retrospective (looking backwards for data)
  • observing only, no direct intervention
  • Experimental
  • always prospective
  • investigators of study have direct intervention

29
Observational Designs
  • Descriptive (Case-Series, Case Report) Study
  • describes situation in group of patients, or
    interesting or unique phenomena.
  • No comparison or control patient groups are used.
  • Example 15 patients are described in whom
    resolution of herpes zoster occurred following
    the initiation of Tagamet therapy for peptic
    ulcer. All pts. began therapy with Tagamet 300 mg
    QID for peptic ulcer disease during the time they
    were having acute episodes of herpes zoster. The
    zoster resolved in 3 days

30
Descriptive (Case Series, Case Report)
  • Advantages
  • Relatively easy and inexpensive to perform
  • Provides preliminary information that could prove
    valuable upon further study- raises questions
    that may prompt more studies
  • Disadvantages
  • Patients might not be representative of others
    with the specific condition
  • Information provided is subject to many potential
    biases.

31
Observational Design- Cross Sectional Study
  • Sometimes called Prevalence or Survey Study.
  • Used to determine the existence of specific
    conditions or characteristics at one given point
    in time. It identifies a sample population and
    makes an assessment of outcome all at the same
    time.
  • No controls used

32
Cross-Sectional Study
  • Example A study selects patients which have had
    an adverse drug reaction to a glaucoma medicine.
    The study looks for risk factors at the time the
    study patients were selected.
  • Example Study to determine whether serum
    creatinine increases with age. SCr levels were
    measured in 400 healthy subjects, between 18-70
    y.o. The relationship between age and serum
    creatinine were then analyzed. The analysis
    showed the strength of the relationship or
    association and the direction of the relationship
    or association.

33
Cross-Sectional Study Design
  • Leads to the Chicken and the Egg dilemma of
    which came first. Does the patient have the ADR
    because of the risk factor or is the risk factor
    a manifestation of the disease, ADR, or a
    confounding factor?

34
Cross-Sectional Study Design
  • Advantages
  • Less time consuming to perform
  • Least expensive to perform
  • Easy to complete (sometimes survey form)
  • Appropriate for evaluating the current status of
    a condition or characteristic.
  • Useful for measuring prevalence, association, and
    estimating risk with odds ratios.

35
Cross Sectional Study Design
  • Disadvantages
  • Bias may be introduced if the measured outcome
    depends on chart review or recall information
    (selection bias, subject bias, investigator bias)
  • Transient effects If the condition being
    monitored can change over time, the results can
    be inaccurate or misleading.
  • Does not establish causation
  • No control group

36
Observational Design- Case Control Study
  • Case-Control Study
  • Used to determine the possible factors
    influencing (risks), or the causes of, an
    observed event or outcome. Since one is looking
    back in time to identify the factors or causes of
    the observed event or outcome, the design is
    always retrospective.
  • The cases are the patients who have the
    observed event or outcome.
  • The controls are similar to the cases, except
    that they do NOT have the observed event or
    outcome. The factors that are different between
    the cases and controls are then examined in terms
    of the ability to influence the event or outcome.
  • Always 2 groups of patients one group with
    outcome, one group without outcome.

37
Case-Control Study
  • Study Example
  • A study was conducted to evaluate the risk of
    leukemia resulting from the use of cancer
    chemotherapy to treat breast cancer. The patient
    files of 90 women with breast cancer diagnosed
    from 1973 to 1985 who developed leukemia were
    examined. Two to 3 additional patients with
    breast cancer but without leukemia were matched
    to each of the other 90 patients and examined. It
    was found that leukemia was uncommon in patients
    with breast cancer, although the risk of
    developing it was significantly enhanced by the
    use of regional radiation.

38
Case-Control Study
  • Always retrospective.
  • Control group used (without outcome)
  • Reports odds ratios and risk ratios
  • Outcome is known- you are looking for factors
    influencing the development of the outcome.
  • Measures risks.
  • Sometimes called Trohoc studies

39
Case-Control Study
  • Advantages
  • Relatively quick to perform
  • Generally inexpensive
  • Appropriate for studying rare diseases or
    conditions which take several years to develop.

40
Case-Control Study
  • Disadvantages
  • Dependent upon accuracy and completeness of
    existing records of past events.
  • Cannot evaluate cause and effect of measure
    incidence-- only prevalence and association.
  • Easily biased by the retrospective nature.
  • Berksons Bias Difficult to obtain controls
    which are truly comparable to the cases
  • Protopathic Bias A disease leads to exposure of
    risk factor rather than visa versa.

41
Berksons Bias
  • The more similar the case and control groups are
    to each other, the more likely a difference found
    between the groups will be due to the variable
    being assessed instead of random variation.
  • Example A study who uses subjects drawn from
    hospitalized populations whose exposure to the
    risk factor may differ from a population in the
    community.

42
Protopathic Bias
  • A disease leads to exposure of the risk factor
    rather than the exposure of the risk factor
    leading to the disease.
  • Example Vaginal bleeding may be an early sign of
    uterine cancer. But vaginal bleeding leads to the
    use of progesterone. A study may say that
    progesterone caused cancer but, maybe the cancer
    preceded the progesterone use.

43
Terminology
  • Prevalence rate The proportion of existing cases
    of a medical condition in the population at risk
    at a specified point in time. For example, the
    prevalence of hospitalized-acquired pneumonia is
    the number of cases divided by the total number
    of patients hospitalized at a particular point in
    time.

44
Terminology
  • Incidence Rate The ratio of the number of new
    cases of a condition to the total number of
    persons in the population at risk for the
    condition during a specified period. For example,
    the incidence of a condition developing may be
    reported as the percentage per person per year.

45
Terminology
  • Odds Ratio A relative measure of disease
    occurrence that provides an estimate of the
    relative risk. It is defined as the frequency
    with which the event occurs divided by the
    frequency with which it does not occur and is
    usually calculated for case-control studies where
    the incidence is not known.

46
Observational Design- Cohort Studies
  • Longitudinal study and observational in nature.
  • Example study looking for drug-drug
    interactions.
  • Cohort group of patients who have not yet
    experienced the outcome under study.
  • Cohort Study characteristics of the cohort are
    recorded over time as the investigator observes
    them waiting for the outcome to occur.
  • Does use a control group

47
Cohort Study
  • Prospective Cohort follows or observes patients
    both with and without certain characteristics/feat
    ures over time period to determine what outcomes
    will be.
  • Retrospective (historical) Cohort Patients are
    followed both with and without certain features
    but all information is collected from the past
    (records, charts, billing claims etc)

48
Cohort Study
  • Advantages of Cohort Study
  • Usually a clear relationship between risk factors
    and the outcomes can be determined.
  • Allows for uniform data collection and avoids
    recall bias (prospective cohort).
  • Useful for measuring incidence, relative risk,
    association and causation
  • Uses a control group -ranks higher for levels of
    evidence in evidence base medicine)

49
Cohort Study
  • Disadvantages of Cohort Study
  • Exact causes of an outcome cannot be definitively
    proven since only observations are being made (no
    intervention)
  • Expensive if patients are followed over long
    period of time
  • Drop out rate can be higher if study is over long
    period of time.

50
Hawthorne Effect
  • Subjects change their behavior while being
    observed (if they know they are being watched,
    they will perform differently)
  • This can increase compliance and increase side
    effects.

51
Cohort Study Example
  • In order to calculate the relationship between
    high serum cholesterol concentrations and the
    risk of developing heart disease, 1000 healthy
    men between 35-50 years were enrolled into a
    study. They were divided into 2 groups- those
    with cholesterol lt180 and those gt180. Men were
    given medical checkups yearly. At the end of 10
    years, the results indicated men with high
    cholesterol were 2x more likely to develop heart
    disease.
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