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9780122740657

Principles and Practice of Clinical Research

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  • ISBN13:

    9780122740657

  • ISBN10:

    0122740653

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2002-01-14
  • Publisher: Elsevier Science & Technology
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Summary

Principles and Practice of Clinical Researchlt;/b> is a comprehensive text which addresses the theoretical and practical issues involved in conducting clinical research. This book is divided into three parts: ethical, regulatory, and legal issues; biostatistics and epidemiology; technology transfer, protocol development and funding. It is designed to fill a void in clinical research education and provides the necessary fundamentals for clinical investigators. It should be of particular benefit to all individuals engaged in clinical research, whether as physician or dental investigators, Ph.D. basic scientists, or members of the allied health professions, as well as both students and those actively participating in clinical research. Key Features * Comprehensive review ranging from a historical perspective to the current ethical, legal and social issues and an introduction to biostatistics and epidemiology * Practical guide to writing a protocol, getting funding for clinical research, preparing images for publication and display * Cohesive and clear presentation by authors carefully selected to teach a very popular course at NIH * Excellent companion text for courses on clinical research

Table of Contents

Contributors xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xv
A Historical Perspective on Clinical Research
John I. Gallin
The Earliest Clinical Research
1(1)
The Greek and Roman Influence
1(1)
Middle Ages and Renaissance
2(1)
Seventeenth Century
3(1)
Eighteenth Century
4(2)
Nineteenth Century
6(3)
Twentieth Century and Beyond
9(6)
PART I ETHICAL, REGULATORY, AND LEGAL ISSUES
Ethical Principles in Clinical Research
Christine Grady
Distinguishing Clinical Research from Clinical Practice
15(1)
What Does Ethics Have to Do with Clinical Research?
15(1)
History of Ethical Attention to Clinical Research
16(3)
Ethical Principles and Guidelines for the Protection of Human Subjects of Research: the Belmont Principles
19(4)
Special Issues in the Conduct of Randomized Clinical Trials
23(2)
Summary
25(2)
Researching a Bioethical Question
Ezekiel J. Emanuel
Types of Bioethical Issues
27(1)
Types of Bioethical Research Methodologies
27(1)
Examples of Important Bioethical Research
28(6)
Special Considerations in Bioethical Research
34(5)
Integrity in Research: Individual and Institutional Responsibility
Alan N. Schechter
Recent History of the Scientific Misconduct Issue
39(1)
Responses of Government
40(1)
Responses of the Scientific Community
41(1)
Guidelines for the Conduct of Research
42(1)
Definition of Scientific Misconduct
43(1)
Authorship
44(1)
Conflicts of Interest
44(1)
Conclusions
45(6)
Institutional Review Boards
Alison Wichman
Alan L. Sandler
Historical, Ethical, and Regulatory Foundations for Current Requirements for Research Involving Human Subjects
51(3)
Institutional Review Boards
54(6)
Clinical Researchers and IRBs
60(1)
The Current IRB System Under Evaluation
60(1)
Conclusion
61(2)
Data and Safety Monitoring Boards
Lawrence M. Friedman
Description of Data and Safety Monitoring Board
63(1)
Data and Safety Monitoring Board Functions
64(1)
Data and Safety Monitoring Board Decision Making
65(1)
Examples
65(2)
Conclusions
67(2)
Data and Data Management Clinical Trials
Jane Cassidy
Definitions
69(1)
Roles and Responsibilities
70(2)
Administrative Aspects
72(5)
Research Records
77(1)
Data Standardization Coding Systems
78(1)
Quality Assurance
79(1)
Audits
79(2)
Audit Preparation
81(2)
Data Analysis
83(1)
Security
83(1)
Archiving
84(1)
Summary
84(1)
Conclusion
84(22)
Unanticipated Risk in Clinical Research
Stephen E. Straus
The Reasons
106(1)
The Drug
107(1)
The Target
108(1)
The Trials
108(2)
Cassandra Revealed
110(1)
Extended Studies
110(1)
FIAU Toxicity
111(1)
Reassessing the Preclinical Studies
112(1)
Research Oversight
113(1)
The Investigations Begin
113(1)
Scientific Misconduct
114(1)
The FDA
115(1)
The NIH
115(1)
The Institute of Medicine
116(1)
The Media
116(1)
The Congress
117(1)
The Law
118(1)
Epilogue
118(5)
The Regulation of Drugs and Biological Products by the Food and Drug Administration
Kathryn C. Zoon
Robert A. Yetter
Background
123(1)
Mission, Organization, and Terminology
124(2)
Drug and Biologic Life Cycle
126(6)
Summary
132(1)
Appendix
132(1)
Legal Issues
Patricia A. Kvochak
Legal Issues Related to Informed Consent for Clinical and Research Care
133(1)
Advance Directives/Substitute Consent
134(2)
Children in Research
136(1)
Medical/Research Records
137(1)
Legal Liability
138(1)
Conflict of Interest
139(1)
Authorship/Rights in Data
140(1)
Appendix: NIH Advance Directive for Health Care and Medical Research Participation
141(5)
NIH Policy on the Inclusion of Women and Minorities as Subjects of Clinical Research
Eugene G. Hayunga
Vivian W. Pinn
NIH Policy
146(1)
Focus on Scientific Considerations
147(1)
Role of the NIH Office of Research on Women's Health
147(1)
Role of Peer Review
148(1)
Role of the Institutional Review Board
149(1)
Role of Volunteers and Their Communities
150(1)
Reaction of the Scientific Research Community
151(1)
Demographic Data on Subject Enrollment
152(2)
Identifying Differences between Women and Men
154(1)
Women of Childbearing Potential and Pregnant Women
155(1)
Future Questions
156(1)
Conclusions
157(6)
PART II BIOSTATISTICS AND EPIDEMIOLOGY
An Introduction to Biostatistics: Randomization, Hypothesis Testing, and Sample Size
Paul S. Albert
Craig B. Borkowf
Introduction
163(1)
Issues in Randomization
164(6)
Overview of Hypothesis Testing
170(9)
Sample Size and Power
179(8)
Design and Conduct of Observational Studies and Clinical Trials
Teri A. Manolio
Types of Epidemiologic Study Designs
187(1)
Case Reports and Case Series
187(1)
Prevalence Surveys or Cross-Sectional Studies
188(2)
Case-Control Studies
190(3)
Prospective or Longitudinal Cohort Studies
193(2)
Causal Inference in Observational Studies
195(1)
Clinical Trials
196(3)
Conduct of Epidemiologic Studies: The Study Protocol
199(8)
Small Clinical Trials
Mitchell B. Max
Where We Are In the Short History of Controlled Clinical Trials
207(1)
Explanatory vs. Pragmatic Orientation in Clinical Trials: Implications for Study Design
208(1)
Issues in Small Clinical Trials that Examine Both Disease Mechanism and Treatment Efficacy
209(8)
Placebo Responses in Clinical Trials
217(5)
Conclusion
222(3)
Large Clinical Trials: Clinical Research Institutes
Robert M. Califf
History
225(1)
Phases of Evaluation of Therapies
225(1)
Critical General Concepts
226(1)
Expressing Clinical Trial Results
227(2)
Concepts Underlying Trial Design
229(4)
Legal and Ethical Issues
233(3)
Hypothesis Formulation
236(2)
Publication Bias
238(1)
Statistical Considerations
238(2)
Meta-Analysis and Systematic Overviews
240(1)
Understanding Covariates and Subgroups
241(1)
Therapeutic Truisms
241(1)
Study Organization
242(4)
Integration into Practice
246(1)
Controversies and Personal Perspective
246(2)
The Future
248(3)
Using Secondary Data in Statistical Analysis
Bradley D. Freeman
Eric P. Gerstenberger
Steven Banks
Charles Natanson
Techniques of Meta-Analysis
251(2)
Meta-Analysis of Clinical Trials of Anti-Inflammatory Agents in Sepsis
253(1)
Conclusions
254(5)
An Introduction to Survival Analysis
Joanna H. Shih
Four Motivating Examples
259(1)
Features of Survival Data
260(1)
Survival Function
260(1)
Comparing Two Survival Functions
261(3)
Stratified Logrank Test
264(1)
Proportional Hazards Model
265(2)
Measures of Function and Health-Related Quality of Life
Lynn H. Gerber
Background About Quality of Life Indicators
267(1)
Definition of Quality of Life
267(1)
Applications for Quality of Life Measures
268(1)
Structure of Quality of Life Measures
269(1)
Criteria for Selection of Quality of Life Measures
270(1)
Specific Quality of Life Instruments
270(1)
Other Instruments to Consider
271(1)
Importance of Quality of Life Measures for Health Care
271(4)
Economic Analysis and Clinical Research
Martin L. Brown
Keven B. Knopf
Stephen E. Marcus
Joseph Lipscomb
Outline of the Chapter
275(1)
The Evolving Field of Economics and Health
276(1)
Economic Cost and Health
277(2)
Types of Economic Analysis
279(9)
Comparing Costs Across Time and Place
288(4)
The Use of Models in Economic Studies
292(2)
Economic Analysis and Clinical Trials
294(14)
PART III TECHNOLGY TRANSFER, PROTOCOL DEVELOPMENT, AND FUNDING
Overview of Technology Development
Bruce Goldstein
Scenario: Disasters Waiting to Happen
308(1)
The First and Biggest Mistake: Signing the Agreements
309(2)
Agreements Not To Disclose: Trade-Secrets and the ``CDA''
311(2)
Agreements to Transfer Materials
313(6)
Collaboration and Inventions: The ``CRADA''
319(4)
Proprietary Materials: The ``Materials-CRADA''
323(1)
Trademarks and Copyrights for the Government Scientist
324(3)
Conclusion
327(2)
Technology Transfer
James Clifford Haight
What is Technology Transfer?
329(1)
What is a Patent?
330(1)
What is an Invention?
330(1)
Who is an Inventor?
331(2)
How to/Not to Disclose an Invention
333(5)
Why Obtain a Patent?
338(1)
When to Seek a Patent
338(1)
Processing Employee Invention Reports at the NIH
339(1)
Where to Obtain a Patent?
339(1)
Statutory and Administrative Basis for Patents
340(1)
Patent Attorneys and Agents
340(1)
Preparing the Patent Application
340(1)
Actions by the U.S. Patent Examiner
341(2)
Appeals from Adverse Examiner's Decisions
343(1)
U.S. Patent Interferences
344(1)
International Treaties and Foreign Patents
344(1)
Procedures Under The Patent Cooperation Treaty
345(1)
The European Patent Convention
346(1)
The European Patent Office
347(1)
National Patent Offices
347(1)
Patent Prosecution Fees
347(1)
The Licensing Process
348(1)
Rights in Government Funded Extramural Inventions
348(1)
Inventions Made in Federal Laboratories
348(1)
Joint Inventions With Non-PHS Co-inventors
348(5)
Types of Licenses Available at the NIH
353(6)
Appendix 1: Research Plan
359(1)
Appendix 2: Exceptions or Modifications to This Crada
359(1)
Summary of Key Points to Remember
359(2)
Telemedicine Systems
Kenneth M. Kempner
Frank S. Govern
Robert L. Martino
Background
361(4)
Common Architectures for Telemedicine
365(2)
Early NIH Telemedicine Activities
367(10)
Development of a Comprehensive NIH Telemedicine Infrastructure (1993-Present)
377(4)
The National Effort to Advance Telemedicine Systems
381(3)
Conclusions
384(3)
Animal Models of Human Disease
Domenico Accili
What Does the Clinician Need to Know About Animal Models?
387(1)
The Choice of an Animal Model
388(1)
The Amazing Development of Mouse Molecular Genetics
389(12)
Conducting and Evaluating Clinical Research on Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Wayne B. Jonas
Klaus Linde
Public Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine
401(1)
Conventional Physician Use of CAM
402(1)
The Risks of CAM
402(1)
Potential Benefits of CAM
402(1)
Reasons for CAM Use
403(1)
Research Evaluation Principles in Medicine
403(5)
Goals and Their Design Elements in CAM Clinical Trials
408(1)
Special Issues in Clinical Research on CAM
409(6)
Evaluation of Specific CAM Practices
415(5)
Developing Research Strategies for CAM
420(7)
Preparing Scientific Images for Publication and Display
Christopher Vargas
Determining Your Needs
427(1)
Image Resolution
428(2)
Bitmapped versus Vector Images
430(1)
Typography Basics
431(1)
WYSIWYG
432(1)
Image Acquisition and Editing
433(1)
Image File Formats
433(1)
Word Processing
434(1)
Drawing Software
435(1)
PostScript Illustration Programs
435(1)
Desktop Publishing Software
436(1)
Presentation Software
436(1)
HTML Software
436(1)
Conclusions
437(2)
Writing a Clinical Protocol: The Mechanics
Eddie Reed
Antoinette Jones-Wells
The Very First Steps
439(2)
Molecular Correlative Studies
441(1)
Framing the Question Being Asked
442(1)
Converting Problems into Assets
443(1)
Allocation of Time and Effort
444(1)
Elements of the Protocol Document
445(2)
Terms to be Familiar With
447(2)
Getting the Funding You Need to Support Your Research: Successfully Navigating the NIH Peer Review Process for Grants
Olivia T. Preble Bartlett
Elliot Postow
Overview of the NIH
449(5)
The NIH Peer Review Process for Grants
454(8)
Hints For Preparing Better Grant Applications
462(9)
NIH Award Mechanisms For Support of Clinical Researchers at Various Stages in Their Careers
471(3)
How to Stay Informed About the NIH Peer Review System
474(1)
Appendix
475(2)
Index 477

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