Abstract

BackgroundRandomization is considered to be a key feature to protect against bias in randomized clinical trials. Randomization induces comparability with respect to known and unknown covariates, mitigates selection bias, and provides a basis for inference. Although various randomization procedures have been proposed, no single procedure performs uniformly best. In the design phase of a clinical trial, the scientist has to decide which randomization procedure to use, taking into account the practical setting of the trial with respect to the potential of bias. Less emphasis has been placed on this important design decision than on analysis, and less support has been available to guide the scientist in making this decision.MethodsWe propose a framework that weights the properties of the randomization procedure with respect to practical needs of the research question to be answered by the clinical trial. In particular, the framework assesses the impact of chronological and selection bias on the probability of a type I error. The framework is applied to a case study with a 2-arm parallel group, single center randomized clinical trial with continuous endpoint, with no-interim analysis, 1:1 allocation and no adaptation in the randomization process.ResultsIn so doing, we derive scientific arguments for the selection of an appropriate randomization procedure and develop a template which is illustrated in parallel by a case study. Possible extensions are discussed.ConclusionThe proposed ERDO framework guides the investigator through a template for the choice of a randomization procedure, and provides easy to use tools for the assessment. The barriers for the thorough reporting and assessment of randomization procedures could be further reduced in the future when regulators and pharmaceutical companies employ similar, standardized frameworks for the choice of a randomization procedure.

Highlights

  • Randomization is considered to be a key feature to protect against bias in randomized clinical trials

  • The results calculated with randomizeR can be shown for a range of sequences as well as using summary statistics

  • Using the settings above for the selection and chronological bias effects, the numerical results for the evaluation are given in Tables 2, 3 and 4

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Randomization is considered to be a key feature to protect against bias in randomized clinical trials. Randomization is considered to be the most important tools to protect against bias and ensure the internal validity of a clinical trial, this is intensively discussed, see [1]. The toss of a fair coin on the other hand, known as complete randomization, is assumed to mitigate bias resulting from conscious or unconscious selection of patients to the treatment groups. Both these randomization procedures have their advantages, and their disadvantages

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call