Why are we Here? Russell E. Glasgow, Ph.D. University of Colorado School of Medicine With thanks to the NIH Health Care Systems Research Collaboratory.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Workshop C – Evaluation Rod Taylor Complex Interventions Research Framework Masterclass 2010.
Advertisements

Perspectives Authors and editors perspective Is there much difference between perspectives of different stakeholders? –authors, readers, editors, clinicians,
Different types of trial design
Knowledge for Knowledge Translation Jeremy Grimshaw MD, PhD Clinical Epidemiology Program, OHRI Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa Canada Research.
Donald T. Simeon Caribbean Health Research Council
Introduction to the User’s Guide for Developing a Protocol for Observational Comparative Effectiveness Research Prepared for: Agency for Healthcare Research.
Implementation, Evaluation and Getting to the Triple Aim Deborah J. Cohen. PhD Oregon Health & Science University Russell E. Glasgow, PhD University of.
The Community Engagement Studio: Strengthening Research Capacity through Community Engagement Consuelo H. Wilkins, MD, MSCI Executive Director, Meharry.
Copyright H Photography 2006 iStockphoto.com Pragmatic cohort studies and comparative effectiveness Eric S Johnson, PhD Kaiser Permanente’s Center for.
Doug Altman Centre for Statistics in Medicine, Oxford, UK
So You Want to Do Comparative Effectiveness Research? The Nuts and Bolts of CER.
©PPRNet 2014 Impact of Patient Engagement on Treatment Decisions and Patient-Centered Outcomes in the Implementation of New Guidelines for the Treatment.
1 Moderators of Treatment Effects in the General Medicine Literature: Looking for Improvement Nicole Bloser, MHA, MPH University of California, Davis June.
Reinventing the 21 st Century Public Health Workforce: Innovation, Evaluation & Practice-Based Research Glen P. Mays, PhD, MPH University of Kentucky HRSA.
Safety, Quality and Information Technology and NHII David W. Bates, Medical Director of Clinical and Quality Analysis, Partners Healthcare Chief, Division.
Evidence Based Nursing Process to Practice Bracken Health Sciences Library (adapted from a presentation of Dr. Norma MacIntyre, School of Rehabilitation.
Research Techniques Made Simple: Pragmatic or Explanatory Trial? The BLISTER Study The Bullous Pemphigoid Steroids and Tetracyclines Study Hywel Williams.
Pragmatic or explanatory trial? Hywel Williams University of Nottingham with help from Daniel Bratton and Andrew Nunn MRC Clinical Trials Unit HTA reference.
Daniel E. Ford, MD, MPH Vice Dean for Clinical Investigation Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
STUDY PLANNING & DESIGN TO ENHANCE TRANSLATION OF HEALTH BEHAVIOR RESEARCH Lisa Klesges, Russell Glasgow, Paul Estabrooks, David Dzewaltowski, Sheana Bull.
Reading Scientific Papers Shimae Soheilipour
Designing Survey Instrument to Evaluate Implementation of Complex Health Interventions: Lessons Learned Eunice Chong Adrienne Alayli-Goebbels Lori Webel-Edgar.
Richard J. Martin 1,2, Alison M. Chisholm 2 & David Price 2,3 1. National Jewish Health, Denver, Colorado 2. Respiratory Effectiveness Group, Cambridge,
My Own Health Report: Case Study for Pragmatic Research Marcia Ory Texas A&M Health Science Center Presentation at: CPRRN Annual Grantee Meeting October.
Joe Selby, MD MPH EBRI December 15, 2011 What Might Patient (Employee)- Centered Research Look Like?
Systematic Reviews.
Dissemination and Implementation Ellen Goldstein, MA, Kevin Grumbach, MD Translating Practice into Evidence: Community Engaged Research.
Barbara Resnick, PhD, CRNP, FAAN, FAANP
SchusterView Graph # 1 OUTLINE FOR TODAY’S TALK Quality of Care: Definitions Who Uses Quality Assessment Information Quality Measurement Methods Challenges.
Evidence-Based Public Health Nancy Allee, MLS, MPH University of Michigan November 6, 2004.
STANDARDS OF EVIDENCE FOR INFORMING DECISIONS ON CHOOSING AMONG ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO PROVIDING RH/FP SERVICES Ian Askew, Population Council July 30,
EBC course 10 April 2003 Critical Appraisal of the Clinical Literature: The Big Picture Cynthia R. Long, PhD Associate Professor Palmer Center for Chiropractic.
Secondary Translation: Completing the process to Improving Health Daniel E. Ford, MD, MPH Vice Dean Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Introduction to Clinical.
Knowledge Translation: Research Into Practice Ian D Graham, PhD FCAHS University of Ottawa Ottawa Hospital Research Institute August 9, 2012.
Integrating Knowledge Translation and Exchange into a grant Maureen Dobbins, RN, PhD SON, January 14, 2013.
THE EVIDENCE SANDWICH MODEL Dr. Soumyadeep Bhaumik BioMedical Genomics Centre, Kolkata Research priority setting exercises:
2nd Concertation Meeting Brussels, September 8, 2011 Reinhard Prior, Scientific Coordinator, HIM Evidence in telemedicine: a literature review.
Knowledge Translation in Education: A Brief Overview Knowledge Translation in Education Knowledge Translation involves taking the best available research.
Types of Research 1. Basic research: To answer questions about the nature of human behavior and to understand psychological processes. Goal is to increase.
Comparative Effectiveness Research : Rethinking Therapeutic Evaluation in Chronic Diseases Ph Ravaud.
PTP 661 EVIDENCE ABOUT INTERVENTIONS CRITICALLY APPRAISE THE QUALITY AND APPLICABILITY OF AN INTERVENTION RESEARCH STUDY Min Huang, PT, PhD, NCS.
1 Evaluation of Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) Initiatives Meredith B. Rosenthal, PhD February 24, 2009.
Is the conscientious explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decision about the care of the individual patient (Dr. David Sackett)
Component 1: Introduction to Health Care and Public Health in the U.S. 1.9: Unit 9: The evolution and reform of healthcare in the US 1.9a: Evidence Based.
Pilot and Feasibility Studies NIHR Research Design Service Sam Norton, Liz Steed, Lauren Bell.
Recruitment, Retention and Adherence in an Under-funded AZMATICS Study David L. Hahn, M.D., M.S. (Epidemiology) Dept. Family Practice, Dean Medical Center.
WELCOME! Pragmatic Trials Training Workshop 2014.
Implementation Science: Finding Common Ground and Perspectives Laura Reichenbach, Evidence Project, Population Council International Conference on Family.
Comparative Effectiveness Research (CER) and Patient- Centered Outcomes Research (PCOR) Presentation Developed for the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy.
Health Care and Promotion Fund Project Expo 2006: Beginning with dissemination in mind: Characteristics of successful health promotion programs Dr. Charles.
PRAGMATIC Study Designs: Elderly Cancer Trials
The PRECIS-2 tool: Matching Intent with Methods David Hahn, MD, MS, WREN Director Department of Family Medicine & Community Health University.
Tim Friede Department of Medical Statistics
Translating Research Into Practice: Pragmatic Research Approaches
Incorporating Evaluation into a Clinical Project
Brady Et Al., "sequential compression device compliance in postoperative obstetrics and gynecology patients", obstetrics and gynecology, vol. 125, no.
Developing a guideline
Study Population and Setting
Chrissie Fletcher, Amgen Ltd on behalf of IMI GetReal
Clinical Studies Continuum
Study Population and Setting
Randomized Trials: A Brief Overview
What can implementation research offer?
MeOTa fall conference October 22, 2016
What Can Researchers Do to Address Health Inequities
Pragmatic trials at 50 – Back to the future?
Observational Studies vs. Randomized Controlled Trials (RCT)
Changing the Health System to Improve the Health of Older Patients
The CIT Model: Can We Call It Evidence-Based?
Regulatory Perspective of the Use of EHRs in RCTs
Presentation transcript:

Why are we Here? Russell E. Glasgow, Ph.D. University of Colorado School of Medicine With thanks to the NIH Health Care Systems Research Collaboratory Pragmatic TRIALS The importance of pragmatic clinical trials

Overview: THE BIG PICTURE Major challenges related to traditional clinical research A MORE PRACTICAL APPROACH Pragmatic clinical trials—what they are and their advantages (and disadvantages) over traditional randomized trials in terms of relevance and applicability to everyday practice THE PRECIS SYSTEM What it is and how it will be used in the workshop 2

3 Challenge #1: Clinical research is slow To most people, randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are the mainstay of clinical research. But traditional RCTs are slow and expensive— and rarely produce findings that are easily put into practice. In fact, after an average of 17 years only 14% of research findings will have lead to widespread changes in care. 1

4 Challenge #2: Clinical research is not relevant to practice Traditional RCTs study the effectiveness of treatments delivered to carefully selected populations under ideal conditions. This makes it difficult to translate results to the real world. Even when we do implement a tested intervention into everyday clinical practice, we often see a “voltage drop”—a dramatic decrease in effectiveness. “If we want more evidence- based practice, we need more practice-based evidence.” Green, LW. American Journal of Public Health, “If we want more evidence- based practice, we need more practice-based evidence.” Green, LW. American Journal of Public Health, 2006.

5 Challenge #3: The evidence paradox More than 18,000 RCTs are published each year—in addition to tens of thousands of other clinical studies. Yet systematic reviews consistently find that we don’t have enough evidence to effectively inform the clinical decisions providers and patients must make. ?

6 We need a more practical, more integrated approach Practice Policy Research Clinical research is more than just traditional RCTs. Pragmatic research is designed with input from health systems— and produces evidence that can be readily used to improve care. By engaging health systems, providers, and patients as partners, pragmatic research accelerates the integration of research, policy, and practice.

7 Pragmatic clinical trials: Partnership- based research built to improve care Pragmatic clinical trials (PCTs) are designed to improve practice & policy. They take place in settings where everyday care happens, such as community clinics, hospitals, and health systems. Collaborating providers and organizations are integral partners and gain practical evidence on how to improve patient health and satisfaction. Pragmatic partnerships engage at multiple levels – including patients, practitioners, teams, health systems and communities.

8 Core characteristics of pragmatic clinical trials (PCTs) 2-4 Questions from and important to stakeholders Multiple outcomes important to decision and policy makers Diverse, representative populations Comparison conditions are real-world alternatives, not a placebo or no treatment Multiple, heterogeneous settings

9 Key differences between RCTs &PCTs A traditional RCT tests a hypothesis under ideal conditions A PCT compares treatments under everyday clinical conditions GOALSTo determine causes and effects of treatment To improve practice and inform clinical & policy decisions DESIGNTests the intervention against placebo using rigid study protocols & minimal variation Tests two or more real-world treatments using flexible protocols & local customization PARTICIPANTSHighly defined & carefully selected More representative because eligibility criteria are less strict MEASURESRequire data collection outside routine clinical care Brief and designed so data can be easily collected in clinical settings RESULTSRarely relevant to everyday practice Useful in everyday practice, especially clinical decision making

10 PCTs: Fewer exclusions allow for a broader subset of participants Traditional RCT PCT Efficacy, among a defined subset Eligible population Exclusions, non- response, etc. Eligible population Exclusions, non- response, etc. Effectiveness, in a broad subset Figure provided by Gloria Coronado, PhD, Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research

11 Growing recognition that more pragmatic research is needed Figure provided by Sean Tunis, MD, Center for Medical Technology Policy

12 The RCT-PCT continuum PCTs are not an abandonment of the scientific methods that have lead to countless breakthroughs. They don’t take away from basic science or diminish the importance of traditional RCTs—we just need a balance. No clinical trial is completely explanatory or pragmatic. RCTs and PCTs exist on a continuum. Explanatory Trial Can an intervention work under ideal conditions? Pragmatic Trial Does an intervention work under usual conditions?

13 The Pragmatic-Explanatory Continuum Indicator Summary (PRECIS) 2 A helpful tool to illustrate the degree to which a trial is pragmatic or explanatory. 10 domains plotted on a “spoke-and-wheel” diagram: 1.Eligibility criteria 2.Intervention flexibility 3.Practitioner expertise (experimental) 4.Comparison intervention 5.Practitioner expertise (comparison) 6.Follow-up intensity 7.Primary outcome 8.Participant compliance 9.Practitioner adherence 10.Primary analyses

14 PRECIS: Two examples PRAGMATIC STUDY EXPLANATORY STUDY Figure from Thorpe KE, et al. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2009

15 Lessons from Initial PRECIS No trial is completely explanatory or pragmatic PRECIS can be used to plan studies, and to reliably rate protocols and completed studies The PRECIS figure is a useful efficient way to summarize information Some aspects of key characteristics of pragmatic trials were not included In 2013/2014 system was revised to create PRECIS-2

16 What’s new/different in PRECIS 2?

17 Key Differences in PRECIS-1 vs. 2 In PRECIS-2, rate compared to usual care No explicit ratings of control conditions Added ratings related to external validity – recruitment and settings

18 Example from: Little P, Moore M, Kelly J, Williamson I, Leydon G, McDermott L, Mullee M, Stuart B: Ibuprofen, paracetamol, and steam for patients with respiratory tract infections in primary care: pragmatic randomised factorial trial. BMJ 2013, 347:f6041.

19 PRECIS-2 Integration into Day* Study Population and Setting Eligibility; Recruitment; Setting; Organization Research Design Primary Outcome; Follow-Up; Primary Analysis Real World Use Flexibility (Delivery); Flexibility (Adherence) *Stakeholder engagement and partnership are cross cutting issues

20 Take-home messages: Why we need PCTs We aren’t reaching patients with complex, comorbid problems and those most in need. Traditional research rarely happens in typical clinical settings, so findings often aren’t feasible for real-world uptake. We aren’t asking questions important to providers, patients, administrators, or policymakers.

21 Take-home messages: Benefits of PCTs for healthy systems & providers Actionable Designed around application to practice, with an emphasis on successful implementation. Patient-centered Research questions and goals are strongly aligned with patient- centered research and care. Relevant Transparent reporting of results that are focused on issues and data that are relevant for making decisions and taking action.

References 1.Balas EA, Boren SA. Managing clinical knowledge for health care improvement. In: Bemmel J, McCray AT, editors. Yearbook of Medical Informatics 2000: Patient-Centered Systems. Stuttgart, Germany: Schattauer Verlagsgesellschaft mbH; 2000: Thorpe KE, et al. A pragmatic-explanatory continuum indicator summary (PRECIS): a tool to help trial designers. Can Med Assoc J, 2009, 180: E Tunis SR, et al. Practical clinical trials: increasing the value of clinical research for decision making in clinical and health policy. JAMA, 2003;290: Glasgow RE, et al. Practical clinical trials for translating research to practice: design and measurement recommendations. Med Care, 2005;43(6): Zwarenstein M, et al. Improving the reporting of pragmatic trials: an extension of the CONSORT statement. BMJ, 2008 Nov 11;337:a