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Form follows function: pragmatic controlled trials (PCTs) have to answer different questions and require different designs than randomized controlled trials (RCTs)
Authors:Franz Porzsolt  Martin Eisemann  Michael Habs  Peter Wyer
Institution:1. Clinical Economics at the Institute of History, Philosophy and Ethics in Medicine, University of Ulm, Frauensteige 6, 89075, Ulm, Germany
2. Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Psychology, University of Troms?, 9037, Troms?, Norway
3. Associate Professor of Pharmacology Medical Faculty, Ludwig Maximilian University Munich, 80539, Munich, Germany
4. Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, 10032, USA
Abstract:

Aim

Rising concern for demonstrated real world comparative effectiveness has heightened interest in “pragmatic trials” design. Pragmatic trials investigate whether the efficacy, presumed or found in explanatory trials under ideal conditions, can also be detected under real world conditions, i.e. effectiveness. It is also recognized that ‘real world’ effects which are usually addressed in public health research gain growing interest in confirming the ‘road capability’ of results obtained under ideal study conditions. This paper demonstrates that studies under ideal or real world conditions use different methods, generate different information and cannot replace each other.

Subjects and methods

The PCT design meets four requirements of public health and of effectiveness research. It includes all individuals who presented with the selected condition. It classifies the included individuals according to baseline risks. It enables plausibility controls. Finally, it compares the outcomes resulting from specified and not-specified interventions or treatments.

Proposal

We propose a pragmatic controlled trial (PCT) design in which patient preference and other co-factors crucial in determining the actual effectiveness of interventional options will not be neutralized by concealed randomization and blinding. This design is applicable to record the selected interventions and generated outcomes in day-to-day health care and is capable of incorporating preference and other participative factors into assessment of effectiveness.

Conclusions

The PCT design is useful for public health research, e.g. the effectiveness of interventions to change smoking habits or to prevent death from breast cancer, as well as for comparative effectiveness research where it will supplement the traditional randomized controlled trial (RCT).
Keywords:
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