Understanding Clinical Trials - PD
Understanding Clinical Trials - PD
Understanding Clinical Trials - PD
Understanding
CLINICAL TRIALS
The journey from initial medical research to the bottle
in your family’s medicine cabinet is complex, time-consuming
and expensive. Can the clinical trial process be refined?
by Justin A. Zivin
O ne of the biggest stories in medicine of the past five years is surely the furor over angiostatin and
endostatin, compounds heralded by some media reports as the cure for cancer (a premature
claim, to be sure). The two substances— which dramatically reduced tumor size in a group of
laboratory mice—made headlines for a few weeks in the spring of 1998 but then faded from public view.
Scientists, however, continued their slow, methodical study of the potential drugs. A year and a half later,
in September 1999, doctors were at last ready to begin testing endostatin in humans. At press time, phase I
of a clinical trial was under way in Boston, Houston, and Madison, Wis.; barring unforeseen complications,
testing should continue through most of this year. But even if all goes smoothly and endostatin proves to be
a safe and effective treatment, it will not be available to patients for several more years.
Another story that often makes the evening news is the promise of gene therapy, but almost half a cen-
tury after the revolution in molecular biology began, no such treatments are available. Testing of gene
TIMELINE FOR DRUG DEVELOPMENT typically spans many and Drug Administration) and, finally, monitoring of drugs on the
years, stretching from preliminary research in the laboratory through market. Efforts by the FDA and clinical investigators have short-
human trials, review by a regulatory agency (such as the U.S. Food ened the process somewhat, but a thorough trial takes time.
File ”Investigational New Drug” Application with FDA
Phase II
Approval
2 YEARS
DUSAN PETRICIC (drawings); HEIDI NOLAND
Phase III
3.5 YEARS
What researchers hope to learn: Who and how many people should be included in the final phase of testing; end
points of trial; preliminary estimates of effective doses and duration of treatment
PATIENT RECORDS must be carefully reviewed during phase II, when trial organizers refine
CORBIS
simple trials offer a far more economi- Center for the Study of Drug Develop- a collection of near-misses is strong. But
cal plan for collecting data on huge ment, the average length of all clinical questions remain about the validity of
numbers of patients; such trials routine- trials under way between 1996 and 1998 meta-analysis: the technique is subject to
ly enroll tens of thousands of subjects was 5.9 years— down from 7.2 years be- potential bias in terms of which studies
for a small fraction of what it would tween 1993 and 1995. But even with were selected for inclusion and the com-
otherwise cost. And with such large timesaving measures in place, clinical parability of those studies. The findings
numbers of people, even small effects of trials still represent a large investment of from a meta-analysis can be useful for
a medication can be detected. time and money. So when the results are interpreting a large amount of conflict-
Large simple trials have a major draw- ambiguous, leaders of a clinical trial ing data, but the results are not generally
back, however: they cannot be used to usually try to extract some useful infor- considered definitive.
test a new drug candidate, because the mation out of their hard work.
side effects are unknown. Giving large Often a phase III trial will show a Financial Dealings
numbers of patients an experimental trend in favor of a drug, but the effect
medication that has never been screened
for safety and has uncertain benefits is
unethical. As a result, researchers typi-
will be too small to serve as statistically
convincing proof. In many instances, ad-
ditional trials give mixed results as well.
M oney— who pays for the research
and who takes home the profits—
looms over every clinical trial. For many
cally run large simple trials to evaluate For such cases, statisticians have devel- years, the pharmaceutical companies
the relative effectiveness of known, ap- oped methods for pooling data from all have done most of the work of clinical
proved treatments. the previous trials to conduct what they trials themselves, hiring physicians to or-
Progress in accelerating the clinical term meta-analysis. Such evaluations re- ganize and run the trials, monitors to
trial process is already apparent. Ac- main controversial, however. The appeal verify that the data have been collected
cording to a 1999 report from the Tufts of trying to salvage a valuable result from accurately, statisticians to analyze the re-
What researchers hope to learn: Whether treatment is effective and what the important side effects are
trol treatment, the trial is called pivotal. Ordinarily two drug actually did help. In practice, initial phase III trials
pivotal trials are needed to prove the value of a new frequently fail to show adequate proof of a drug candi-
therapy to regulatory agencies such as the U.S. Food date’s efficacy, and several follow-up trials must be car-
and Drug Administration or the European Agency for ried out. — J.A.Z.
HOPING FOR GOOD RESULTS, doctor and patient in this phase III trial of laser therapy for
Barrett’s esophagus disease await an answer to the crucial question: Does the treatment work?
thy, fast or cheap. Generally speaking, a Medicare? Going one step further, how tors and regulatory agencies around the
trial can have only two of these charac- well tested are other items that con- world, we can expect even better treat-
teristics. If a trial is fast and cheap, it is sumers purchase and how accurate are ments and continued elimination of old-
unlikely to be trustworthy. advertising claims? The validity of medi- er medications and procedures that do
No drug will ever be perfect, a com- cal claims is far better substantiated than not work. A long, dismal history tells of
plete cure for everyone with no side ef- in almost any other area of commerce. charlatans who make unfounded prom-
fects for anyone. The clinical trial re- The vast majority of the medical pro- ises and take advantage of people at the
mains a crucial proving ground for any fession accepts randomized, controlled time when they are least able to care for
new drug or medical device. A good way clinical trials as the required gold stan- themselves. The clinical trial process is
to evaluate the reliability of trials is to dard for deciding whether a treatment is the most objective method ever devised
compare them to matters requiring med- useful. The methodology is still evolving, to assess the efficacy of a treatment. It is
ical judgment. How often is unnecessary and some of the newer approaches to expensive and slow, and in need of con-
surgery performed? How often are false testing should prove to be of help. With stant refinements and oversight, but the
bills sent to insurance companies or increasing cooperation among investiga- process is trustworthy. SA