Elearning Courses Essential Element 2: Choice of Control and Standard of Care
Elearning Courses Essential Element 2: Choice of Control and Standard of Care
Introduction
The choice of the control treatment arm affects multiple aspects of the trial, including
its ethical acceptability. Three control categories should be evaluated: active
comparator, placebo-alone, and standard of care. As part of this assessment, it is necessary
to consider the standard of care otherwise available to the participants, because all of the arms of
a study will be judged against the standard of care that participants would or could receive if not
enrolled in the research.
There is general agreement that active control trials pose less risk of harm to individual research
participants than placebo-controlled trials because all participants receive active
treatment and therefore have the potential to benefit from the study. However, active control
trials are not without ethical concern. Some concerns include:
Biased comparisons related to comparator selection and use, patient population, and
selection endpoints;
Increased overall participant exposure to risk due to a statistically requisite increase
in sample size (versus placebo control);
Threats to scientific validity due to assay sensitivity; and
Concerns regarding availability/accessibility of active controls in host countries,
including implications of regional standard of care.
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Introduction
In clinical trials that compare the efficacy of new therapeutic regimens against currently-
available regimens, the control arm is often designed to be the “standard of care”. The standard
of care is usually assumed to be the standard regimen to treat the disease under study, based on
the current best medical practices and best available therapeutics. But the concept of
standard of care is often more complicated. For some diseases, there may be no single medical
regimen accepted as best practice. The standard of care may be different in different
countries, and even different within regions of the same country based on the local health
care practices, availability of heath care resources, medical practice patterns, drug approvals or
the ability to obtain approved medications.
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Essential Element 2: Choice of Control and
Standard of Care
22% complete
Introduction
The following is an example of a flow diagram/algorithm for choosing a control:
Amdur R.J. & Biddle C.J. 2001. Used with permission from Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Choice of Control
Choice of control affects multiple aspects of the trial, including its ethical acceptability, the
kind of endpoint that can be studied, how the results can be interpreted, the degree to
which bias in conducting and analyzing the study can be minimized, the public and
scientific credibility of the results, and the acceptability of results by regulatory
authorities (ICH Guideline E10).
1. Active comparator,
2. placebo
3. Standard of care
When choosing a control (comparator) arm for a clinical study, there are points to
consider for Active Control, Placebo and Standard of Care. We will now look at each of
these in more detail!
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Is the active control an established effective intervention? If not, why is this ethically
justified? (See Placebo Points to Consider)
Is there potential bias in the selection of the active control such that there will be an
unfair advantage for the investigational treatment? For example, is the active control
treatment known to be significantly less effective in this study population than another
treatment? If so, why is this control being used over another option?
Is the requisite sample size for an active control study ethically justified with regard to
the number of participants who will be exposed to the risk(s) of the study?
Will use of an active control threaten the scientific validity of the study? (e.g. diminished
ability to determine assay sensitivity, inability to assess absolute effect size, greater
difficulty measuring safety outcomes)
For multiregional clinical trials, is the active control available to all study sites and will
the active control be accessible to research participants at the close of the study?
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Placebo
Placebo
Situations where assay sensitivity may be an issue include study of diseases with waxing and
waning symptoms or a historically high rate of placebo response, such as trials of
depression. In such cases it may be necessary to use a placebo control to demonstrate efficacy.
Use of an active comparator may also result in reduced ability to define the safety profile of an
investigational intervention due to statistical requirements to reliably detect safety signals.
This difficulty measuring safety outcomes is a key reason why some regulatory agencies require
placebo-controlled trials for registration purposes.
Good assay sensitivity for an active control superiority trial usually requires a larger sample
size than for a placebo-controlled trial in order to achieve statistical significance. When the
use of placebo control can reasonably be expected to result in only temporary or minor
discomfort, it is generally considered ethical to use placebo because the trial can be completed
more quickly, (thus exposing fewer participants to study risks [Leon 2000]), and the safety
profile of the investigational intervention is more easily characterized.
While assay sensitivity can be an issue with placebo-
controlled trials, it is much more challenging in active-controlled trials. With placebo-controlled
trials, the goal is always to demonstrate that the investigational intervention is superior
to placebo. With active control trials, the goal may be either to demonstrate superiority
or non-inferiority (i.e. the investigational intervention is at least on par with an established
effective intervention for specified safety and efficacy measures). A superiority trial allows for
direct assessment of assay sensitivity while a non-inferiority trial is an indirect assessment of
assay sensitivity.
If a trial is designed to show superiority and it lacks assay sensitivity, it may fail to lead to a
conclusion of superior efficacy.
If a trial is designed to show non-inferiority and it lacks assay sensitivity, it may fail to
recognize an ineffective treatment.
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Placebo
Despite the scientific advantages of using placebo, there are lingering ethical concerns that some
research participants by the very design of a placebo controlled trial will not receive active
treatment (either investigational or established effective intervention). Thus, use of a placebo
control may present the risk of serious or irreversible harm or undue pain and suffering. In such
cases, use of placebo control would be unethical. Therefore, use of placebo must be
specifically justified.
Ethical justification should include:
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Placebo
The following factors may provide additional justification:
There are no established effective interventions for the treatment of the disease or
condition under study;
Existing evidence raises legitimate doubt within the relevant expert community regarding
the effectiveness of available treatments;
Currently available treatments are highly toxic or cause intolerable side effects;
A patient population is known to be resistant to available therapies by virtue of genetic
characteristics, past treatment history, or known medical history;
When placebo is preferred scientifically, but there is greater than temporary or minor
discomfort, risk management strategies should be instituted to minimize risks and ensure
participant safety. Some methods for reducing the risk of placebo include:
Standard of care can be ethically relevant to both active and placebo controlled designs. These
issues may need to be considered in conjunction with either of the study designs:
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Essential Element 2: Choice of Control and
Standard of Care
83% complete
Standard of Care
Issues of standard of care receive particular attention when studies are conducted internationally;
involving multiple countries or regions where the medical practices differ, or when studies are conducted
in medically underserved countries where the local medical standards are inadequate in comparison to
what the medical treatment would be in a developed country with better medical resources. There have
been several notable cases which have received significant attention and made this a topic of much
discussion in the field of research ethics, including a series of placebo-controlled studies on perinatal HIV
transmission conducted in a region where the standard of care was no therapy, but the standard of care in
other countries was an antiviral regimen with demonstrated benefit. For this reason, it is important to
clearly address any potential ethical concerns in the protocol.
Care should also be taken to make sure the term “standard of care” is used correctly when used in
protocols. The term does not have a true medical definition, but is of legal origin and refers to what
a reasonable physician would do in prescribing care to a patient. Sometimes this care is determined
by consensus of the medical specialty or by accepted treatment guidelines. Sometimes there is no single
“standard of care” and what is really meant is that the regimen is chosen by the physician.
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Essential Element 2: Choice of Control and
Standard of Care
89% complete
eLearning Courses
The name that will appear on your certificate is Melodia Gandeza.
Summary
Choice of control affects many aspects of a trial, including ethical acceptability, endpoint that can
be studied, how results can be interpreted, degree to which bias in conducting and analyzing the
study can be minimized, credibility and acceptability of results.
When choosing a control (comparator) arm for a clinical study, there are points to consider for
active control, placebo, and standard of care.
Researchers should assess which of three types of control treatments to include in the study: active
comparator, placebo-alone, or standard of care.
It is generally considered ethical to use placebo if the use of placebo as control can reasonably be
expected to result only in temporary or minor discomfort.
When placebo is preferred scientifically, but there is greater than temporary or minor discomfort,
risk mitigation strategies should be used to minimize risks and ensure patient safety.
Each study will be judged against the standard of care that participants would or could receive if
they were not enrolled in research. However, for some diseases, there may not be an accepted
medical regimen as best practice, or standards may vary in different countries or within the same
country.
Providing care at the local standard rather than the global standard needs to be explained in the
ethical acceptability of the study.
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Results
Score for this question group: 100%
1. When evaluating the ethics for a clinical trial, active comparator, placebo, and standard of care
should be considered.
o True Your correct answer
o False
2. There is general agreement that placebo-controlled trials pose less risk of harm to individual
research participants than active control trials.
o True
o False Your correct answer
3. All of the arms of a study should be evaluated against the standard of care that research
participants would or could receive if not enrolled in re…
o True Your correct answer
o False
4. In a clinical trial, the choice of control impacts: (Check all that apply)
o Ethical acceptability Your correct answer
o Endpoint that can be studied Your correct answer
o How results can be interpreted Your correct answer
o Degree to which bias can be minimized Your correct answer
o Public and scientific credibility of results Your correct answer
o Acceptability of results by regulatory authorities Your correct answer
5. The Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences (CIOMS) and the World
Medical Association (WMA) recommend that research participant…
o True Your correct answer
o False
6. What can influence the selection and use of active controls?
o a) Ineffective comparator (type, dosage, regimen)
o b) Selection of patient population
o c) Availability and accessibility of effective intervention
o e) All of the above Your correct answer
o f) A and C only
7. Which of the following statements are true? (Check all that apply)
o A trial with an active comparator is considered one of the least reliable ways to
demonstrate safety and efficacy of an intervention because it provides a valid baseline to
distinguish between effective treatment and ineffective treatment.
o When the use of placebo control can reasonably be expected to result only in
temporary or minor discomfort, it is generally considered ethical to use
placebo. Your correct answer
o A placebo-controlled trial can be justified if there are no established effective
interventions for the treatment of the disease or condition under study. Your
correct answer
o When a placebo-controlled trial is preferred scientifically, but there is greater than
temporary or minor discomfort, it is ethical to proceed without establishing risk
management strategies.
8. What does “standard of care” refer to? (Check all that apply.)
o The best available care for a specific condition anywhere in the world.
o What a reasonable physician would do in prescribing care to a patient. Your
correct answer
o Consensus of the medical speciality or accepted treatment guidelines in a
particular part of the world. Your correct answer
o Regimen chosen by the physician if no single standard exists. Your correct
answer
9. Which of the following questions should be considered for choosing a control?
o Is standard treatment considered to be effective?
o Are there medically sound reasons to use placebo?
o Could this trial benefit future patients to the point that a reasonable person with an
average degree of altruism and risk-aversiveness would consent to being randomized in
this trial?
o All of the above Your correct answer
10. For multi-regional clinical trials, researchers need to consider whether the proposed active control
is available to all study sites and accessible…
o True Your correct answer
o False