Affiliation:
1. Department of Gastroenterology St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust London UK
2. School of Immunology and Microbial Sciences King's College London London UK
3. Department of Gastroenterology, INFINY Institute, FHU‐CURE Nancy University Hospital Vandœuvre‐lès‐Nancy France
4. Paris IBD Center Groupe Hospitalier Privé Ambroise Paré – Hartmann Neuilly sur Seine France
Abstract
SummaryBackgroundOne of the greatest challenges in the current IBD clinical trial landscape is, perhaps, the recruitment and retention of eligible participants. Seamless testing of promising investigational compounds is paramount to address unmet needs, but this is hindered by a number of barriers, particularly patient concerns of placebo assignment.AimsTo review the use of novel trial designs leveraging externally derived data to synthetically create control groups or augment existing ones, and to summarise the regulatory position on the use of external controls for market authorisation.MethodsWe conducted a PubMed literature search without restriction using search terms such as ‘external controls’ and ‘historical controls’ to identify relevant articles.ResultsExternal controls are increasingly being used outside the context of cancer and rare diseases, including IBD, and increasingly recognised by regulatory bodies. Such designs, particularly in earlier phase trials, can inform key nodes in drug development and permit evaluating efficacy of interventions without combating the ethical and numerical enrolment challenges described. However, the lack of randomisation and blinding subjects them to significant bias. Groups require robust statistical and computational approaches to ensure patient‐level data across groups are adequately balanced.ConclusionsWhile this approach has several pitfalls, and is not robust enough to replace traditional randomised, placebo‐controlled trials, it may offer a compromise to address key research questions at a more rapid pace, with fewer patients, and lower cost.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology
Cited by
5 articles.
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