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Treatment Considerations And Bias

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Anti-diabetic drugs (actos, miglitol, Glipizide, glucotrol, metformin)- blood glucose ... A drugs therapeutic response will be less than expected or absent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Treatment Considerations And Bias


1
Treatment Considerations And Bias
  • Dosages, potency, inclusion/exclusion, study
    setting

2
What is Bias?
  • Systematic (or introduced) error that leads to
    data distortion (skewing) and hence, to an
    incoherent conclusion
  • Subject selection bias
  • Study design
  • Random sampling
  • Randomization are groups equal
  • Inclusion/exclusion criteria

3
Data Collection Bias
  • Method selected for data collection
  • Measuring method
  • Validity and reproducibility of instrument used
    to measure
  • Blinding

4
Investigator Bias
  • Journal study is published in
  • Drug company funding? (dont automatically
    reject the study!)
  • Value statements in results/discussion that are
    unsupported by literature (citations, statistics
    from current study)
  • Statistical vs. clinical significance
  • Use of the word significance

5
Bias with Significance
  • Obstructive symptom score in Men with BPH treated
    with Finasteride or Placebo
  • Group Baseline score 12 mo. Score
  • Placebo 6.7 3.5 5.9 3.8
  • 1 mg Finas. 7.4 3.8 6.0 3.8
  • 5 mg Finas. 7.0 3.6 5.1 3.6
  • Statistically significantly different from
    placebo.

6
Confounding variables
  • Something the investigators did NOT do or failed
    to consider, which may have influenced the
    outcome/results.
  • Pharmacokinetics
  • Side effects
  • Demographics of study population
  • Pharmacogenetics race, gender, age
  • Compliance
  • Dosages
  • Study setting

7
Dosages
  • Must be administered in a dose likely to produce
    benefit
  • There is no single or standard relationship
    between the intensity of response and dose (dose
    response curve) which can be uniformly applied to
    all drugs.
  • Variation
  • small increase in dose can cause large response
  • large increase in dose can cause small response

8
Potency
  • Because 1 drug is more potent than another on a
    mg to mg basis, this does not imply clinical
    superiority.
  • Potency is not important when comparing efficacy
    if they are equivalent doses
  • Doses for active controls should also be
    comparable to those of the study drug
  • Use of fixed doses could be inappropriate

9
Fixed Doses
  • Problems with a fixed dose study
  • might not be applicable to real world
  • a therapeutic dose in one patient might not be
    adequate in another.
  • If patients have widely varying body weights, the
    amount of drug each receives (on a mg to mg
    basis) could vary widely.

10
Therapeutic Concentration
  • For many drugs there is no proven exact
    correlation between the concentration of the drug
    and clinical response.
  • Beta blockers- propranolol, metoprolol
  • anti-inflammatories- ibuprofen, naprosyn
  • Some antidepressants- Paxil, Celexa, Zoloft
  • Cholesterol/Triglyceride lowering agents-
  • Clonidine (BP), Ketoconazole (antifungal)

11
Therapeutic Concentration
  • For many, it is easier and more clinically
    relevant to measure the response, or another
    marker
  • Warfarin- PT/ INR, Heparin- PTT
  • Cholesterol lowering drugs- blood cholesterol
  • Diuretics (Dyazide, Diuril)- urinary output
  • Anti-diabetic drugs (actos, miglitol, Glipizide,
    glucotrol, metformin)- blood glucose
  • Antibiotics (PCN, TCN, Ery., keflex)- blood
    bacteria levels

12
Therapeutic Concentration
  • For some drugs, assaying levels is expensive or
    inconvenient
  • Free phenytoin levels vs. bound phenytoin levels
  • Drug concentrations can be used to help indicate
    whether or not the patient has been compliant
    with medication regimen BUT, no guarantee of
    compliance with regimen.

13
Therapeutic Range
  • If drug has a therapeutic range, then doses
    should be employed which will assist patients
    achieving concentrations in the therapeutic range
  • Drugs with narrow therapeutic ranges Digoxin,
    Lithium, Dilantin, Theophylline, Tegretol,
    Vancomycin, Gentamicin, Tobramycin, Procainamide,
    Lidocaine, Quinidine

14
Pharmacokinetic Properties
  • Absorption Efficacy measurements taken at
    appropriate times, ie. after absorption
  • Bioavailability can be altered by
  • Concomitant ingestion of food- antibiotics
  • Diurnal variation- pravastatin, prednisone
  • Alterations in GI tract motility- Reglan (ac)
  • pH differences- enteric coated ASA, bisacodyl

15
Absorption in relation to meals
  • Pen VK with food slows rate but not overall
    absorption
  • Pen G has decreased absorption w/ food
  • Ketoconazole has increased absorption w/ food
  • Griseofulvin absorption is increased w/ high fat
    meal.

16
Onset of Action
  • Immediate release tablet/capsule has fast onset
  • Delayed release has slower onset
  • Liquids have fast onset
  • Injectables have fastest onset
  • Transdermal patches have slow onset

17
Time Until Onset of Effect Differences
  • Nicotine patch- 2-4 hrs
  • Clonidine patch - 6-12 hrs
  • Duragesic patch 8-12 hrs

18
Timing of Dose in Relation to Blood Levels
  • Antibiotics should be dosed around the clock for
    maximum bioavailability
  • Gentamicin is renal toxic if levels are not
    allowed to drop before re-dosing
  • Nitrates need to have blood levels drop to a drug
    free period to be most effective

19
Time To Therapeutic Effect
  • Need blood levels drawn at appropriate time
  • Dependent on half life of drug
  • Steady state achieved w/in 4-5 half lives
  • Takes 4-5 half lives to remove drug from body
  • Peak and/or trough blood levels are appropriate
    for some toxic drugs (Gentamicin, Vancomycin,
    Tobramycin)

20
Concurrent Medications
  • Subjects may take non study drugs
  • because they have another medical condition
  • if they were taking them before this study began.
  • Consider drug interactions with study med
  • increase bioavailability may make study drug look
    more effective than it is
  • affect underlying disease state being studied
  • taken equiv. amounts in tx and control group?
  • Do they contribute to adverse effects observed?

21
Study Setting- Inpatient Setting
  • The more rigidly controlled the environment is,
    the more difficult to extrapolate the findings to
    the outside population
  • Inpatient
  • close supervision - improved compliance
  • less exercise/ activity - more tests
    needed
  • more evaluations needed - less protocol
    variation
  • less protocol variation
  • less environmental variability

22
Outpatient Setting
  • More environment variability
  • Less compliance control
  • More diet variability
  • Less testing
  • less supervision
  • more protocol variation

23
Artificial Setting
  • Arranged environment (NH, VA hospital, clinical
    research labs, dorms, hotel rooms, prisons)
  • Used more often in studies which recruit
    volunteers.
  • This environment is primarily used to control a
    greater of variables

24
Compliance of Drugs
  • 80 of patients take less than 80 of their
    prescribed doses
  • Those with mild disease have worst compliance
  • Those with severe disease have moderate
    compliance
  • Those with moderate disease have best compliance

25
Compliance Bias
  • Occurs when differences in tx lead to different
    degrees of compliance by patient
  • Bias exists when it can be concluded that one of
    the drugs lacked efficacy when in actuality, it
    might not have been taken.
  • Example Using Nitroglycerin oint vs. patch
  • Ointment messy, more frequent applications
  • Patch once per day at bedtime (easier)
  • Compliance is usually a greater concern in
    studies involving out-patients than in-patients

26
Methods to Measure and Assess Compliance
  • Observing patients take their doses
  • pill counts
  • use of a non-toxic inert marker in study med
  • asking the patient directly and frequently
  • measuring the concentration of drug in blood
    stream
  • use of an electronic device in the vial cap
  • review of Rx records- refills, patient diaries
  • Physiological evidence- HR, BP, urine color

27
How Can Non-Compliance Effect the Study Results
  • A drugs therapeutic response will be less than
    expected or absent
  • A drug will be considered less potent than it
    actually is
  • One drug could be assumed to be similar or less
    effective than another drug
  • Non-compliance increases the sample size needed
    to detect a difference between groups

28
How to Analyze Non-Compliance
  • Exclusion Drop non-compliant patients from
    evaluation of the results.
  • Intent-to-treat Include everyone even if they
    had their therapy altered (non-compliant)
  • taking patients last score at time they dropped
    out
  • taking average score for entire group
  • taking worst score for entire group

29
Number Needed to Treat (NNT)
  • NNT number of individuals that need to be
    treated in order to prevent one adverse event or
    one outcome. NNT 1
  • ARR
  • Ex study determine efficacy of drug preventing
    cancer. Incidence of cancer in placebo 15, in
    treatment group 5
  • 15-5 10 1/10 10NNT (10 pts needed to
    treat to prevent 1 case of cancer
  • NNT 1/ placebo - treatment group

30
Number Needed to Harm (NNH)
  • NNH 1/ treatment- placebo group
  • Ex Headache occurred in 25 of placebo patients
    and 75 of patients taking drug X.
  • The NNH 75-25 50 1/0.5 2
  • Only 2 patients would need to be treated with
    drug X in order to cause a headache occurrence.
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