Do current clinical trials meet society's needs?: a critical review of recent evidence.
Pocock, Stuart J;
Gersh, Bernard J;
(2014)
Do current clinical trials meet society's needs?: a critical review of recent evidence.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 64 (15).
pp. 1615-1628.
ISSN 0735-1097
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2014.08.008
Permanent Identifier
Use this Digital Object Identifier when citing or linking to this resource.
This paper describes some important controversies regarding the current state of clinical trials research in cardiology. Topics covered include the inadequacy of trial research on medical devices, problems with industry-sponsored trials, the lack of head-to-head trials of new effective treatments, the need for wiser handling of drug safety issues, the credibility (or lack thereof) of trial reports in medical journals, problems with globalization of trials, the role of personalized (stratified) medicine in trials, the need for new trials of old drugs, the need for trials of treatment withdrawal, the importance of pragmatic trials of treatment strategies, and the limitations of observational comparative effectiveness studies. All issues are illustrated by recent topical trials in cardiology. Overall, we explore the extent to which clinical trials, as currently practiced, are successful in meeting society's expectations.