Title: Research%20Design%20
1Research Design EBM
Ravi Kant MS, DNB, FAMS, FRCS (Edin), FRCS
(Glasg), FRCS (Engl.), FRCS (Irel.), FACS, FICS,
FAIS Professor of Surgery
2Science
- Intelligent Hypothesis
- Experiments analysis of results prove that
hypothesis is correct. - Replicable universally Most Important
3Evidence based medicine what it is and what it
isn't
- Integrating individual clinical expertise and
the best external evidence - BMJ 199631271-72 (13 January)Â
- Editorial
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5Evidence-based health care?
6Evidence-based health care?
7Type of study Definition
Observational Evaluating results of condition or treatment in a defined population Retrospective analyzing past events Prospective collecting data contemporaneously
Case-control Series of patients with a particular disease or condition contrasted with matched control patients
Cross-sectional Measurements mode on a single occasion, not looking at whole population but selecting small similar group expanding results
Longitudinal Measurements are taken over a period of time, not looking at whole population but selecting small similar group expanding results
Experimental Two or more treatments are compared. Allocation to treatment groups is under the control of the researcher
Randomized Two randomly allocated treatments
Randomized controlled Includes control group with no treatment
8Observational study
- Evaluating results of condition or treatment in a
defined population
9Retrospective
10Prospective
- collecting data contemporaneously
11Case-control
- Series of patients with a particular disease or
condition contrasted with matched control patients
12Cross-sectional
- Measurements mode on a single occasion, not
looking at whole population but selecting small
similar group expanding results
13Longitudinal
- Measurements are taken over a period of time, not
looking at whole population but selecting small
similar group expanding results
14Experimental
- Two or more treatments are compared. Allocation
to treatment groups is under the control of the
researcher
15Randomized
- Two randomly allocated treatments
16Prospective Randomized controlled
- Includes control group with no treatment
- GOLD STANDARD
17Confidence Interval
18RR
19Hazard ratio/ Odds ratio
20Systemic Review
- reliable
- systematic
- predefined, explicit methodology
- minimize bias
- Systemic review Statistics meta-analysis
21Systemic Review
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23Levels of evidence
- 1 Meta-analyses of Prospective Double blind
randomized controlled trials - 2Prospective Randomized Controlled study/
Meta-analyses of retrospective studies - 3 Case series/ Cohort study
- 4 Case report/ observational
- 5 Expert opinion
24Evidence grade I
- I (High) the described effect is plausible,
precisely quantified and not vulnerable to bias
25Evidence grade I
- II (Intermediate) the described effect is
plausible but is not quantified precisely or may
be vulnerable to bias
26Evidence grade III
- III (Low) concerns about plausibility or
vulnerability to bias severely limit the value of
the effect being described and quantified
27Strength of recommendation Definition A
- ARecommendation based on consistent and good
quality patient-oriented evidence
28Strength of recommendation Definition B
- BRecommendation based on inconsistent or limited
quality patient-oriented evidence
29Strength of recommendation Definition C
- CRecommendation based on consensus, usual
practice, opinion, disease-oriented evidence or
case series for studies of diagnosis, treatment,
prevention, or screening.
30Recommendation grade A
- A (Recommendation) there is robust evidence to
recommend a pattern of care
31Recommendation grade B
- B (Provisional recommendation) on balance of
evidence, a pattern of care is recommended with
caution
32Recommendation grade C
- C (Consensus opinion) evidence being inadequate,
a pattern of care is recommended by consensus
33US Government Agency for Health Care Policy and
Research (AHCPR)A
- A requires at least one randomized controlled
trial as part of the body of evidence.
34US Government Agency for Health Care Policy and
Research (AHCPR)B
- B requires availability of well-conducted
clinical studies but no randomized controlled
trials in the body of evidence.
35US Government Agency for Health Care Policy and
Research (AHCPR)C
- C requires evidence from expert committee
reports or opinions and/ or clinical experience
of respected authorities. Indicates absence of
directly applicable studies of good quality
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37Grading of evidence
- Ia Systematic review or meta-analysis of
randomized controlled trials - Ib at least one randomized controlled trial
- IIa at least one well-designed controlled study
without randomization - IIb at least one well-designed
quasi-experimental study, such as a cohort study - III well-designed non-experimental descriptive
studies, such as comparative studies, correlation
studies, casecontrol studies and case series - IV expert committee reports, opinions and/or
clinical experience of respected authorities
38Grading of recommendations
- A based on hierarchy I evidence
- B based on hierarchy II evidence or extrapolated
from hierarchy I evidence - C based on hierarchy III evidence or
extrapolated from hierarchy I or II evidence - D directly based on hierarchy IV evidence or
extrapolated from hierarchy I, II or III evidence
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40Research can be Quantitative
- A medical condition is analyzed systematically
using hard, objective end point such as death or
amputation.
41Research can be Qualitative
- Data come from patient narratives, and the
psychosocial impact of the disease and its
treatment are analyzed, for example narratives of
breast cancer.
42Project design include
- Sample size.
- Eliminating bias.
- Study protocol.
- Ethics.
43Sample size
- An incorrect sample size is probably the most
frequent reason for research to be invalid. - Never forget that more patients will need to be
randomized than the final sample size to take
into account patients who die, drop out or are
lost to follow up.
44Sample size
- nXr(100-r)s(100-s)/(r-s)2
45Type I error
- Benefit is perceived when really there is none
(false positive)
46Type II error
- Benefit is missed because the study has small
numbers (false negative)
47Eliminating bias Single blind
- The observers or recorders who do not know which
treatment has been used.
48Eliminating bias Double blind
- Neither patient nor researcher is aware of which
therapy has been used until after study has
finished, these are the best randomized studies.
49The Cochrane Collaboration
- Best evidence
- an international not-for-profit and independent
organization, - It produces and disseminates systematic reviews
of healthcare interventions and promotes the
search for evidence in the form of clinical
trials and other studies of interventions. - The Cochrane Collaboration was founded in 1993
and named after the British epidemiologist,
Archie Cochrane.
50Current reliable evidence-based medicine
resources for the busy clinician -1
- American College of Physicians Journal Club
http//www.acpj.org - American Family Physician http//www.aafp.org/afp
- Bandolier http//www.rj2.ox.ac.uk/bandolie
- Clinical Evidence http//www.clinicalevidence.com
51Current reliable evidence-based medicine
resources for the busy clinician -2
- Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
http//www.cochrane.org/reviews/en/ - Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects
(DARE) http//www.york.ac.uk/inst/crd/crddatabases
.htm - Dr. Alper's Useful Links http//www.myhq.com/publi
c/a/l/alperDynaMed http//www.dynamicmedical.com - Family Practitioners Inquiries Network (FPIN)
Clinical Inquiries http//www.fpin.org - FIRSTConsult http//www.firstconsult.comInfoPOEMs
The Clinical Awareness Systemhttp//www.infopoem
s.com
52Current reliable evidence-based medicine
resources for the busy clinician -3
- Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement (ISCI)
http//www.icsi.org/knowledge - Journal of Family Practice http//www.jfponline.or
g - SUM Search http//sumsearch.uthscsa.edu
- TRIP Database Â
- http//www.tripdatabase.comUpToDate http//www.upt
odate.com
53Current reliable evidence-based medicine
resources for the busy clinician -4
- US National Guideline Clearinghouse
http//www.guidelines.gov - U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF)
Recommendations http//www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstfi
x.htm
54Current reliable evidence-based medicine
resources for the busy clinician -5
- Â Bandolier
- Evidence based thinking about healthcare
- Â Cochrane Library Database of Systematic Reviews
- Full text systematic reviews of health care
interventions, prepared by The Cochrane
Collaboration. - Â The Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects
(DARE) - Critical appraisal of systematic reviews
published in the medical literature. - Â Health Technology Assessment Database (HTA)
- Completed and on-going health technology
assessments from around the world - Â NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED)
- Reliable information about the costs as well as
the effects of drugs, treatments and procedures,
to inform decisions. - Â UK Database of Uncertainties about the Effects
of Treatments - Publishes those patients' and clinicians'
questions about the effects of treatments which
cannot currently be answered reliably by
referring to up-to-date systematic reviews of
existing research.
55Web search-6
- Clinical evidence.com
- Cochrane.org
- Consolidated Standards of Reporting trials
consort-statement.htm - National Institute for Health Clinical
excellence (NICE.org.uk - Scottish Intercollegiate Guideline Network (SIGN)
www.sign.ac.uk
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58Cochrane
59Bandolier
60DARE data base of abstracts of reviews of effects
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63Web-based evidence-based medicine courses-1
- Â Â Â Â http//www.poems.msu.edu/infomastery
    http//www.hsl.unc.edu/services/tutorials/ebm
/welcome.htm     http//www.uic.edu/depts/lib/l
hsp/resources/ebm.shtml.    http//library.ncah
ec.net/ebm/pages/index.htm
64Web-based evidence-based medicine courses-2
- http//www.urmc.rochester.edu/hslt/miner/resources
/evidence_based/index.cfm - http//library.downstate.edu/EBM2/contents.htm
- http//www.healthsystem.virginia.edu/internet/libr
ary/collections/ebm/index.cfm - http//www.cebm.net/
- http//www.sheffield.ac.uk/scharr/ir/netting/
65POEMS
- Journals with highest frequency of articles that
contain patient oriented evidence that matters
(POEMs)
66Impact factor
- average number of citations to those papers
that were published during the two preceding
years.
67Impact factor
- For example, the 2008 impact factor of a journal
would be calculated as follows - AÂ the number of times articles published in
2006 and 2007 were cited by indexed journals
during 2008 - BÂ the total number of "citable items" published
in 2006 and 2007. ("Citable items" are usually
articles, reviews, proceedings, or notes not
editorials or Letters-to-the-Editor.) - 2008 impact factor  A/B
68High-impact journals (those cited most frequently
by others)
- Annals of Internal Medicine
- British Medical Journal
- Journal of the American Medical Association
- Lancet
- New England Journal of Medicine
69A new drug project
70Preclinical studies
- Even animal studies need ethical clearance in
Europe -  Efficacy, toxicity and pharmacokineticÂ
- data
71Phase 0
- Human microdosing
- Distinctive features of Phase 0 trials include
the administration of single subtherapeutic doses
of the study drug to a small number of subjects
(10 to 15) to gather preliminary data on the
agent's pharmacokinetics (how the body processes
the drug) and pharmacodynamics (how the drug
works in the body)
72Phase 1 trial
- Dose escalation Dose ranging
- Pharmacovigilance
73- SAD
- Single Ascending Dose studies
- MAD
- Multiple Ascending Dose studies
- Crossover study
- A short trial designed to investigate any
differences in absorption of the drug by the
body, caused by eating before the drug is given.
These studies are usually run as a crossover
study, with volunteers being given two identical
doses of the drug on different occasions one
while fasted, and one after being fed.
74Phase II
- Larger group
- Phase IIA is specifically designed to assess
dosing requirements (how much drug should be
given). - Phase IIB is specifically designed to study
efficacy (how well the drug works at the
prescribed dose(s)).
75Phase II
- Toxixity efficacy defines go ahead or not
76Phase III
- Phase III studies are randomized
controlled multicenter trials on large patient
groups (3003,000 or more depending upon the
disease/medical condition studied)
77Phase IV
- Phase IV trial is also known as Post Marketing
Surveillance Trial - Pharmacovigilance
78Research Design
- It's always easier to explain design notation
through examples than it is to describe it in
words. The figure shows the design notation for
apretest-posttest (or before-after) treatment
versus comparison group randomizedÂ
79Research Design
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81Experimental study- steps
- Animal model
- Induce tumor by viral inoculation
- Treat tumor by various laser wavelength
- Correct wavelength applied in incurable humans
- Regular Clinical approach
82Pilot study
- Somprakas Basu, Bina Ravi Ravi Kant
Interstitial laser Hyperthermia, a New Method in
the Management of Fibroadenoma of the Breast A
Pilot Study. Lasers in Surgery and Medicine,
1999 Vol. 25 p 148-152.
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85Interstitial Laser Hyperthermia
- For solid tumors of-
- Liver
- Pancreas
- Lymph nodes
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91ILH Pancreas
- Kant Ravi, Masters A, Lees WR, Bown SG
Interstitial Laser Hyperthermia in Human pancreas
tumors GUT, supplement 1992. Vol. 33 No 1 W69,
p S18.
92Lab studies? need infrastructure
- Hedau S, Jain N, Husain SA, Mandal AK, Ray G,
Shahid M, Kant R, Gupta V, Shukla NK, Deo SS,
Das BC. Novel germ line mutations in breast
cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1, BRCA2 and p53
gene in breast cancer patients from India. Breast
Cancer Research Treat 2004 Nov, 88(2)177-86.
93The Liver The drains do not offer any benefit
after elective liver resections.
- Marcello Spampinato Hassan Elberm Colin D
Johnson in Recent Advances in Surgery 31, by
Irving Taylor Colin Johnson, The Royal Society
of Medicine Press,  2008 page 189- - Gurusamy KS, Samraj K, Davidson BR. Routine
abdominal drainage for uncomplicated liver
resections.  Cochrane Database Systemic Rev 2007
CD006232
94GB
- The Gall Bladder The drains do not offer any
benefit after routine uncomplicated laparoscopic
cholecystectomy. - Marcello Spampinato Hassan Elberm Colin D
Johnson in Recent Advances in Surgery 31, by
Irving Taylor Colin Johnson, The Royal Society
of Medicine Press,  2008 page 196- - Gurusamy KS, Samraj K, Mullerat P et al. Routine
abdominal drainage for uncomplicated
laparoscopic cholecystectomy.  Cochrane Database
Systemic Rev 2007 CD006004
95The Thyroid No drain is required following
thyroidectomy.
- Khanna J, Mohil RS, Chintamani, Bhatnagar D,
Mittal MK, Sahoo M, Mehrotra M. Is the routine
drainage after surgery for thyroid necessary? A
prospective randomized clinical study
ISRCTN63623153. BMC Surg. 2005 May 19 511. - Suslu N, Vural S, Oncel M, Demirca B, Gezen FC,
Tuzun B, Erginel T, Dalkilic G. Is the insertion
of drains after uncomplicated thyroid surgery
always necessary? Surg Today. 2006 36(3)215-8. - Lee SW, Choi EC, Lee YM et al. Is lack of
placement of drains after thyroidectomy with
central neck dissections safe? A prospective
randomized study. Laryngoscope 20061161632-1635
96The Breast No drain is required after
conservation surgery for breast cancer
- Stojkovic C, Smeulders MJ, Van der Horst CM.
Wound drainage after plastic and reconstructive
surgery of the breast (Protocol). Cochrane
Database of Systematic Reviews 2008, Issue 3.
Art. No. CD007258. DOI 10.1002/14651858.CD007258
.
97- Rectal Surgery The pelvic drainage after rectal
surgery adds no benefit. - Urbach DR, Kennedy ED, Cohen MM. Colon and rectal
anastomosis donot require routine drainage a
systemic review and meta-analysis. Ann Surg 1999
229174-180.
98- Incision by electrocautery heal as well as
incision by knife. No difference in either
postoperative results or in cosmesis. - Kears SR, Connolly EM, Mc Nally S, McNamara DA,
Deasy J. Randomized clinical trial of diathermy
versus scalpel incision in elective midline
laparotomy. - Br J Surg 2001 8841-44.Â
99Summary
100Evidence-Based surgery
- Evidence-base study is a move to find out the
best ways of managing patients using clinical
evidence from collected studies. - Collecting published evidence together and
analyzing it often requires review of multiple
randomized trials. - These meta-analysis involve complex statistical
analysis designed to interpret multiple findings
and synthesize the results of multiple studies.
101Important advantages of evidence-based medicine
- Has the potential to improve quality of patient
care - Identifies and promotes practices that are proven
scientifically to be effective - Identifies practices that are ineffective or
harmful - Promotes critical thinking
- Requires clinicians to be open-minded
- Encourages researchers to focus on evidence and
outcomes that are important to clinicians and
patients
102Type of study Definition
Observational Evaluating results of condition or treatment in a defined population Retrospective analyzing past events Prospective collecting data contemporaneously
Case-control Series of patients with a particular disease or condition contrasted with matched control patients
Cross-sectional Measurements mode on a single occasion, not looking at whole population but selecting small similar group expanding results
Longitudinal Measurements are taken over a period of time, not looking at whole population but selecting small similar group expanding results
Experimental Two or more treatments are compared. Allocation to treatment groups is under the control of the researcher
Randomized Two randomly allocated treatments
Randomized controlled Includes control group with no treatment
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104POEMS
- patient-oriented evidence that matters (POEMs)
105Drains Evidence
- Presented in your book as a chapter
106Cochrane
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