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Systematic review of enriched enrolment, randomised withdrawal trial designs in chronic pain

Authors :
Simon Haroutounian
Scott A. Strassels
Kate Seers
Paul M. Peloso
Nathaniel P. Katz
Stephen Morley
Andrea D Furlan
Philip J Wiffen
R A Moore
Ian Gilron
Sebastian Straube
Sheena Derry
Christopher Eccleston
Arthur G. Lipman
Rae Frances Bell
Ralf Baron
Steve Quessy
Source :
Pain. 156:1382-1395
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2015.

Abstract

Enriched enrolment, randomised withdrawal (EERW) pain trials select, before randomisation, patients who respond by demonstrating a predetermined degree of pain relief and acceptance of adverse events. There is uncertainty over the value of this design. We report a systematic review of EERW trials in chronic noncancer pain together with a critical appraisal of methods and potential biases in the methods used and recommendations for the design and reporting of future EERW trials. Electronic and other searches found 25 EERW trials published between 1995 and June 2014, involving 5669 patients in a randomised withdrawal phase comparing drug with placebo; 13 (median, 107 patients) had a randomised withdrawal phase of 6 weeks or less, and 12 (median, 334) lasted 12 to 26 weeks. Risks of bias included short duration, inadequate outcome definition, incomplete outcome data reporting, small size, and inadequate dose tapering on randomisation to placebo. Active treatment was usually better than placebo (22/25 trials). This review reduces the uncertainty around the value of EERW trials in pain. If properly designed, conducted, and reported, they are feasible and useful for making decisions about pain therapies. Shorter, small studies can be explanatory; longer, larger studies can inform practice. Current evidence is inadequate for valid comparisons in outcome between EERW and classical trials, although no gross differences were found. This systematic review provides a framework for assessing potential biases and the value of the EERW trials, and for the design of future studies by making recommendations for the conduct and reporting of EERW trials.

Details

ISSN :
03043959
Volume :
156
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f37444ec96a6a4183cc42a523820214d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000088