PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Improving risk/benefit estimates in new drug trials

Shortcomings in the way researchers interpret pre-clinical studies may be creating inflated expectations about new drugs

2011-03-09
(Press-News.org) It's all too familiar: researchers announce the discovery of a new drug that eradicates disease in animals. Then, a few years later, the drug bombs in human trials. In the latest issue of the journal PLoS Medicine, ethics experts Jonathan Kimmelman, associate professor at McGill's Biomedical Ethics Unit and Department of Social Studies of Medicine, and Alex John London, associate professor of philosophy at Carnegie Mellon University, argue that this pattern of boom and bust may be related to the way researchers predict outcomes of their work in early stages of drug development.

"We do a fairly good job of predicting the success of interventions that make it to later stages of clinical research," said London, who also directs CMU's Center for Ethics and Policy. "But when it comes to the leap from animal studies to the first trials in humans, there are serious problems."

Kimmelman and London suggest that the interpretation of pre-clinical results may suffer from a kind of myopia, in which a narrow focus on the data about the performance of a new drug in pre-clinical studies produces overly optimistic predictions.

"Clearly we need to look at the pre-clinical evidence about a new intervention when estimating its likely benefits and burdens in people," London said. "But we also need to look at how similar interventions have fared in the past. If drugs that work on the same principle have failed development, there may be good grounds for tempering our expectations."

Kimmelman and London also question whether researchers are doing enough to minimize any factors that interfere with measuring a drug's true effects. They suggest that some of the techniques such as randomization and blind testing that are common in clinical tests involving human subjects should also be used at the pre-clinical stage. "Medical researchers do a lot to control bias in drug trials with humans. We think if these measures were taken up by researchers who test drugs in animals, we would have a better basis for designing human trials," says Kimmelman.

If researchers adopt Kimmelman and London's recommendations for improving the ways that they predict outcomes from preclinical trials they suggest that the research participants, drug developers and funding agencies will all be better equipped to make informed decisions about clinical drug testing, the study suggests.

"Pre-clinical studies provide a useful starting place for determining whether a new drug is clinically promising," Kimmelman said. "We think we can – and should – be doing more to ensure predictions about clinical activity rest on a more complete and sound evidence base."

INFORMATION:

The research was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

Kimmelman and London are currently investigating the quality and outcomes of studies as drugs advance from pre-clinical stages of testing to clinical trials thanks to a recent grant from the Canadian Institute of Health Research.

For an abstract of the paper: http://www.plosmedicine.org/home.action

Full study is available on request.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

No link between economic growth and child undernutrition rates in India

2011-03-09
Economic growth in India has no automatic connection to reducing undernutrition in Indian children and so further reductions in the prevalence of childhood undernutrition are likely to depend on direct investments in health and health-related programs. These are the conclusions of a large study by researchers at the Schools of Public Health at University of Michigan and Harvard University, that is published in this week's PLoS Medicine. Malavika Subramanyam, S V Subramanian and colleagues collected data from the National Family Health Surveys conducted in India in 1992-93 ...

IRBs could use pre-clinical data better

2011-03-09
In this week's PLoS Medicine, Jonathan Kimmelman from McGill University in Montreal, Canada and Alex London from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, USA argue that ethical reviewers and decision-makers pay insufficient attention to threats to validity in pre-clinical studies and consult too narrow a set of evidence. They propose a better way for ethical and scientific decision makers to assess early phase studies: first, to attend to reporting and methodological quality in preclinical experiments that support claims of internal, construct, and external validity; and ...

Study: Receiving work-related communication at home takes greater toll on women

2011-03-09
WASHINGTON, DC, March 3, 2011 — Communication technologies that help people stay connected to the workplace are often seen as solutions to balancing work and family life. However, a new study in the March issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior suggests there may be a "dark side" to the use of these technologies for workers' health—and these effects seem to differ for women and men. Using data from a national survey of American workers, University of Toronto researchers asked study participants how often they were contacted outside the workplace by phone, e-mail, ...

Conflicts-of-interest in drug studies sneaking back into medical journals, say investigators

2011-03-09
Hidden financial conflicts-of-interest are sneaking into published drug research through the back door, warns an international team of investigators, led by researchers from the Jewish General Hospital's Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research and McGill University in Montreal. More and more, policy decisions and what medications doctors prescribe for their patients are being driven by large "studies of studies," called meta-analyses, which statistically combine results from many individual drug trials. Led by Dr. Brett Thombs and McGill graduate student Michelle ...

Trauma patients have higher rate of death for several years following injury

2011-03-09
In a study that included more than 120,000 adults who were treated for trauma, 16 percent of these patients died within 3 years of their injury, compared to an expected population mortality rate of about 6 percent, according to a study in the March 9 issue of JAMA. The researchers also found that trauma patients who were discharged to a skilled nursing facility had a significantly increased risk of death compared with patients discharged home without assistance. Trauma can lead to significant illness or death. "To date, there have been few large studies evaluating long-term ...

Meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials seldom show conflict of interest, funding information

2011-03-09
Information concerning funding and author conflicts of interest disclosed in the original reports of randomized controlled trials is rarely disclosed when these data are combined in meta-analyses, according to an article in the March 9 issue of JAMA. "Conflicts of interest (COIs) related to the funding of biomedical research by pharmaceutical companies and financial relationships between researchers and pharmaceutical companies have come under increased scrutiny in recent years. COIs may influence the framing of research questions, study design, data analysis, interpretation ...

Brief video training dramatically boosts hands-only CPR attempts

2011-03-09
Study participants who viewed a brief hands-only cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) video were more likely to attempt CPR, and perform better quality CPR in an emergency than participants who did not view the short videos, according to research reported in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. Each year, almost 300,000 people suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in the United States. Survival rates from these events tend to be extremely low. However, research has shown that bystander CPR can double — even triple — survival from out-of-hospital cardiac ...

Collaborative care program reduces depression, anxiety in heart disease patients

2011-03-09
Participants in the first hospital-initiated, low-intensity collaborative care program to treat depression in heart patients showed significant improvements in their depression, anxiety and emotional quality of life after 6 and 12 weeks, researchers report in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, an American Heart Association journal. Depression is a common condition in cardiovascular disease (CVD) patients which can result in poor prognosis and quality of life. Collaborative care depression management programs use a non-physician care manager to coordinate ...

Chronic disease care poorer in nursing and residential homes under GP target scheme

2011-03-09
The quality of chronic disease care under the GP pay for performance system is poorer for residents of care homes than those living in the community, according to a study published on bmj.com today. The Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) for general practice is a voluntary system of financial incentives, which has been in place since 2004. Part of the programme includes specific targets for GPs to demonstrate high quality care for patients with chronic diseases. The study found that, although pay for performance systems do not invariably disadvantage residents of ...

Health Bill unlikely to improve children's health services, warn child health experts

2011-03-09
The coalition government's Health and Social Care Bill is a missed opportunity to deliver the improvements in children's health services in England that are urgently needed, warn experts in a paper published on bmj.com today. Ingrid Wolfe and some of the country's leading experts in child health propose a fundamentally different way of delivering children's health care that is long overdue in the UK. The authors argue that care provided by UK children's health services is inferior in many regards to that in comparable European countries. However, the government's proposals ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Students who use dating apps take more risks with their sexual health

Breakthrough idea for CCU technology commercialization from 'carbon cycle of the earth'

Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group

Depression research pioneer Dr. Philip Gold maps disease's full-body impact

Rapid growth of global wildland-urban interface associated with wildfire risk, study shows

Generation of rat offspring from ovarian oocytes by Cross-species transplantation

Duke-NUS scientists develop novel plug-and-play test to evaluate T cell immunotherapy effectiveness

Compound metalens achieves distortion-free imaging with wide field of view

Age on the molecular level: showing changes through proteins

Label distribution similarity-based noise correction for crowdsourcing

The Lancet: Without immediate action nearly 260 million people in the USA predicted to have overweight or obesity by 2050

Diabetes medication may be effective in helping people drink less alcohol

US over 40s could live extra 5 years if they were all as active as top 25% of population

Limit hospital emissions by using short AI prompts - study

UT Health San Antonio ranks at the top 5% globally among universities for clinical medicine research

Fayetteville police positive about partnership with social workers

Optical biosensor rapidly detects monkeypox virus

New drug targets for Alzheimer’s identified from cerebrospinal fluid

Neuro-oncology experts reveal how to use AI to improve brain cancer diagnosis, monitoring, treatment

Argonne to explore novel ways to fight cancer and transform vaccine discovery with over $21 million from ARPA-H

Firefighters exposed to chemicals linked with breast cancer

Addressing the rural mental health crisis via telehealth

Standardized autism screening during pediatric well visits identified more, younger children with high likelihood for autism diagnosis

Researchers shed light on skin tone bias in breast cancer imaging

Study finds humidity diminishes daytime cooling gains in urban green spaces

Tennessee RiverLine secures $500,000 Appalachian Regional Commission Grant for river experience planning and design standards

AI tool ‘sees’ cancer gene signatures in biopsy images

Answer ALS releases world's largest ALS patient-based iPSC and bio data repository

2024 Joseph A. Johnson Award Goes to Johns Hopkins University Assistant Professor Danielle Speller

Slow editing of protein blueprints leads to cell death

[Press-News.org] Improving risk/benefit estimates in new drug trials
Shortcomings in the way researchers interpret pre-clinical studies may be creating inflated expectations about new drugs