CHAPTER 5 Conducting Clinical Research 63
»
» Exploratory efficacy objective: To compare the effect of drug XYZ, relative to
drug ABC, on changes in sexual function from baseline to weeks 4, 8, and 12,
in male and female subsets of participants with HTN.»
» Safety objective: To evaluate the safety of drug XYZ, relative to drug ABC, in
terms of the occurrence of adverse events, changes from baseline in vital signs
such as temperature and heart rate, and changes in laboratory results of safety
panels (including tests on kidney and liver function), in participants with HTN.
For each of these objectives, it is important to specify the time range of participa-
tion subject to the analysis (such as the first week of the trial compared to other
time segments). Also, which groups are being compared for each objective should
be specified.
Hypotheses usually correspond to the objectives but are worded in a way that
directly relates to the statistical testing to be performed. So, the preceding pri-
mary objective may correspond to the following hypothesis: “The mean 12-week
reduction in SBP will be greater in the XYZ group than in the ABC group.” Alter-
natively, the hypothesis may be expressed in a more formal mathematical nota-
tion and as a null and alternate pair (see Chapters 2 and 3 for details on these
terms and the mathematical notation used):
H
H
Null
XYZ
ABC
Alt
XYZ
ABC
:
:
0
0
where
mean of (SBPWeek 12
Baseline
SBP
).
In all types of human research, identifying the variables to collect in your study
should be straightforward after you’ve selected a study design and enumerated all
the objectives. In a clinical trial, you will need to operationalize the measurements
you need, meaning you will need to find a way to measure each concept specified
in the objectives. Measurements can fall into these categories:»
» Administrative: This information includes data related to recruitment,
consent, and enrollment, as well as contact information for each participant.
You need to keep track of study eligibility documentation, as well as the date
of each visit, which study activities took place, and final status at end of study
(such as whether participants completed the study, dropped out of the study,
or any other outcome).»
» Intervention-related: This includes data related to the intervention for each
participant, such as group assignment, dosing level, compliance, and adher-
ence measures. If you plan to assign a participant to a particular group but
they end up in another group, you need to keep track of both group
assignments.