Login / Signup

Controls, comparator arms, and designs for critical care comparative effectiveness research: It's complicated.

Verity J FordHarvey G KleinRobert L DannerWillard N ApplefeldJeffrey WangIrene Cortes-PuchPeter Q EichackerCharles Natanson
Published in: Clinical trials (London, England) (2023)
Flawed critical care comparative effectiveness research trial designs can lead to unsound trial conclusions, compromise informed consent, and increase risks to research subjects, undermining the major goal of comparative effectiveness research: to inform current practice. Well-constructed control and comparator arms comprise indispensable elements of critical care comparative effectiveness research trials, key to improving the trials' safety and to generating trial results likely to improve patient outcomes in clinical practice.
Keyphrases
  • phase iii
  • study protocol
  • phase ii
  • clinical trial
  • clinical practice
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • randomized controlled trial
  • open label
  • risk assessment
  • quality improvement