Conducting flawless research – the right question, the right design Dr. Dick Menzies July 10th, 2015 The starting point in Research – a Problem • An unusual clinical observation – An unusual cluster (Outbreak of XDR in S Africa) – An unusual complication (Acquired Rifamycin resistance) • An observation from reported data – Temporal trend (Increase in TB in Foreign-born) – Geographic clustering (TB in hospitals) • Problems in diagnosis – Delayed diagnosis (cultures, DST) – Missed diagnosis (AFB smears in HIV infected) • Problems in treatment: – Treatment too long (Standard “short-course” therapy) – Treatment too toxic (INH) – Treatment too long AND too toxic (MDR, 9INH) An unusual clinical observation – example Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis as a cause of death in patients with TB and HIV in rural South Africa Neel R Gandhi, Anthony Moll, A Willem Sturm, Robert Pawinski, Thiloshini Govender, Umesh Lalloo, Kimberly Zeller, Jason Andrews, Gerald Friedland • Among 475 patients with culture-confirmed TB: – 39% (185 patients) MDR-TB – 6% (30 patients) XDR-TB. • Of XDR-TB: – – – – 45% had been previously treated for TB ; 67% had a recent hospital admission. 100% of tested for HIV were co-infected. 98% died, with median survival of 16 days From clinical problem (XDR outbreak) to Research question • • • • • • Questions arising: How (and why) did the patients acquire XDR? Why the association with HIV co-infection? Why the association with hospitalization? Why was mortality so high? Why was mortality so rapid? • Each of these questions needs a separate study, and unique design - to be answered. • WHICH question should be answered? • IS this the right problem? Choosing the right study question Step 1: Definition of the problem – Who gets the problem, – How important is it - does it affect death? Costs? Quality of life? Step 2: Understanding the biology? • • • Manifestations - what organs are affected Pathogenesis - probable or know Transmission/hosts/reservoirs Step 3: make the question as precise as possible – (PICO or pseudo-PICO format) Choosing the right study question “That year in the lab saved me a day in the library” Step 4. Review the literature (again) (and again) – This is often under-utilized - can avoid wasted time – Avoid repeating errors others have made – Do not study a problem that has been well described. • RCT of FDCs (have been 15), • Comparing positive TST vs IGRA (have been hundreds) – Know what has been described • Effect of standard treatment • Accuracy of standard diagnostics Step 5. Get the opinions of others – Speak to experts (or pseudo-experts) – Speak to providers – Speak to patients, community members, others affected From Research qst to study design The biggest determinants of study design: 1) Time – investigators’ and patients’ 2) Money (“The biggest determinant of sample size is the budget”) 3) Resources – what do you have to work with? (Diagnostic Laboratory, Molecular Epi, Molecular Biology, Genetics) 4) Collaborators – who do you have to work with? What can they do? These 4 factors determine the kinds of studies you can do – which determines the question you can answer. Hierarchy of study designs • Descriptive studies • Analytic studies – Observational • • • • Cross-sectional Ecologic studies Case control studies Cohort studies – Experimental studies • Uncontrolled trials • Randomized controlled trials – Individual level – Field trials = group level Increasing costs and complexity • Case reports, and case series • Reported data, • Prevalence surveys Reported Data • Useful to: – – – – Define incidence/prevalence Identify geographic or temporal differences Describe clinical characteristics Describe outcomes. • Implicit comparison with general population – Risk factors can be identified. – Useful if data is COMPLETE and ACCURATE 19 53 19 56 19 5 19 9 62 19 65 19 6 19 8 71 19 74 19 7 19 7 80 19 83 19 8 19 6 89 19 92 19 95 19 98 20 01 TB incidence (per 100,000 ha.) Temporal trends may indicate clues to causal exposure Coal use and TB in USA: 1953 – 2003 60 100 50 80 40 60 30 40 20 20 10 0 0 Years Coal use ( ) and TB incidence ( ). Total residential coal consumption (Million short tons) 120 100 95 90 85 80 75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 Years Total coal combustion ( ) Notified cases of TB ( ). 1998 2000 2002 2004 Total coal consumption (exajoules) TB notification rate (per 100,000 ha.) Temporal trends may indicate clues to causal exposure Coal use and TB in China: 1978 - 2004 Ecologic Studies Advantages • Usually very easy and quick studies • Take advantage of already gathered data – Exposures – Diseases Disadvantages • Relationship may be due to completely unmeasured factors • VERY substantial potential for confounding Directionality in research • Retrospective: Start with persons with disease and ‘look backward’ in time to ascertain exposures. – Advantages: Biggest is convenience – do not have to wait a long time, because disease HAS happened. Makes these studies much quicker to complete, and much cheaper. • Prospective: Start with a population and observe them ‘going forward’ in time. Exposures are measured first, and health events are measured afterward, as they occur. – Advantages: Biggest is accuracy of exposure, and certainty that exposure precedes disease. Cross-sectional or Prevalence Studies General approach: Measure disease(s) and exposure(s) all at once in a population. Estimate effect: Prevalence odds ratio Advantages • Good for common/chronic diseases • Good for common exposures • Allows one to measure multiple disease or conditions and multiple exposures Disadvantages • Measurement of exposure may be difficult – Recall problems if long latency – May change over time (Alcohol, smoking, blood pressure) • Can not distinguish cause and effect – (Tobacco Industry defense) Tuberculin (or IGRA) Surveys A special type of cross-sectional survey • Once TST or IGRA convert to positive with TB infection – they remain positive lifelong (some exceptions) • Cross-sectional survey – detects all with positive tests – from recent or remote • From prevalence of positive test at a given age – can calculate average annual risk of TB infection. • Can compare prevalence in different populations • If different ages, or different exposure periods can estimate trends in infection University students in Brazil (All BCG vaccinated in infancy) % of Reaction Silva et.al. IJTLD2000; 4:420-426 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Engineering Students Medical Students Early 0-2 Intermediate 3-4 Senior 5-6 Years of training Average ARI: Preclinical Clinical Incidence of TB in Brazil: 0.2% 2.9% 75/100 000 Example of Kaplan-Meier analysis: General Hospital Ventilation and time to TST conversion Case Control Studies General Approach: • Measure exposures retrospectively in persons with disease (cases) and without disease (controls) • Estimate odds of exposure for disease (Odds ratio) Advantages • Relatively cheap and quick • Particularly useful for studying rare conditions – Or conditions with long latency Disadvantages • Controls, Controls, Controls – Very difficult to select proper controls – This is the source of most problems in case control studies – And is why they are generally considered weak evidence. • Difficulties of retrospective exposure assessment – particularly if long latency Fitness costs of drug-resistance mutations in MDRTB: a household-based case-control study. Salvatore…. and Cohen T, JID 2015 • Cases: MDR index patients with at least 1 other HH member with same strain • Controls: MDR but no-one in HH with same strain • Matching: – Same number of contacts in House-Hold – Same extent of Drug Resistance – Same time to detection • Not matched: Extent of disease, Cavitation, smear, duration of symptoms, prior episodes, Size of house • Findings: katG Ser315Thr mutation associated (OR: 2.39; 95% CI: 1.21- 4.70). BUT combination of katG Ser315Thr & rpsL-Lys43Arg mutations was protective. Nested Case Control study – example TB outbreak in Inuit village Behr, Fox, Khan, Lee, Menzies & many others • Major ‘outbreak’ of TB in small village in N Quebec • 695/940 residents investigated as contacts during outbreak – Newly infected – 50 Confirmed disease, 19 probable disease • Case control study of housing, nutrition, lifestyle determinants – “Nested” within all 695 investigated as contacts • Case-control1: New Infection – Cases=Newly infected, Controls = Not infected • Case-control2: Disease – Cases=Confirmed or Probable, Controls = Infected but no disease Cohort Studies General approach: • Start with a population free of disease. Measure exposures, and follow them all. • Estimate of effect: Risk ratio (Risk disease in Exposed/unexposed) Advantages: • Can measure many exposures, and many diseases • Temporal relationship clearer (cause before disease) Disadvantages • Long and expensive (often very $$$) • Good for common diseases (some cancers, cardiovascular). • But not for rare diseases or long latency • Also what if you fail to measure key determinants – (Solution = freezer) Average Annual Incidence of Tuberculosis Among Navy Recruits By History of Household Contact Average anual rate per 100,000 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 Contact with TB No Contact with TB 0 0 2.5 5 7.5 10 12.5 15 17.5 20 22.5 25 27.5 30 Mm. of induration on enlisted Comstock, Edwards, and Livesay; Am Rev Respir Dis 1974; 110:576 Country N Test Incidence of active TB in IGRA+ groups The Gambia [Hill et al. 2008] 2348 ELISPOT (inhouse) 9/1000 person-yr Turkey [Bakir et al. 2008] 908 ELISPOT (T-SPOT.TB) 21/1000 S Africa [Mahomed et al. 2009 (abstract)] 5248 QFT 6/1000 person-yr Colombia [del Corral et al. 2009] 2060 In-house wholeblood CFP-10 assay 11/1000 person-yr Senegal [Lienhardt et al. PLoS One 2010] 2679 ELISPOT (inhouse) 14/1000 person-yr person-yr Randomized Trials Advantages • Best method to evaluate an intervention • Best control of bias and confounding Disadvantages • Not easy or feasible for all interventions • Very Expensive and long • Not for studies of risk factors or natural history • Substantial refusal or drop-out rates can restrict generalizability • Population selected may not be representative – Younger adults with only one condition – Often exclude pregnant woman, kids, elderly! Solution – Biomarker? – 2 month culture conversion instead of fail/relapse Five Phase 2 trials: 2 month culture conversion with FQN (all patients received 4 months HR in continuation) Author Year Patients (N) FQN regimen Control Regimen 2 Month Culture Conversion FQN Control Burman 2006 277 HRZM HRZE 71% 71% Rustomjee 2008 205 HRZG/M HRZE 79%/42% 64%/36% Conde 2009 146 HRZM HRZE 80% 63% Dorman 2009 328 MRZE HRZE 60% 55% Wang 2010 123 HRZEM HRZE 90% 78% Three Phase 3 trials of 4 month regimens with FQN Study Pts. (N) FQN – 4 months Standard - 6 months Cure Death Fail/ Relapse Cure Death Fail/ Relapse OFLUTB 1585 79% 1% 16% 83% 1% 10% Remox 1900 83% 1% 11% 92% 1% 3% Rifaquin 592 82% 0 18% 95% 1% 4% Experimental Community or Field Trials General Design • Pick an intervention to be applied at a community level – Fluoride in water, public education, vaccination • Find several communities or population groups • Apply intervention to some and not others – Randomly again • Measure outcomes at population or group level Cluster randomized Trials – example Effect of improved tuberculosis screening and isoniazid preventive therapy on incidence of tuberculosis and death in patients with HIV in clinics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: a stepped wedge, cluster-randomised trial Betina Durovni, Valeria Saraceni, Lawrence H Moulton, Antonio G Pacheco, Solange C Cavalcante, Bonnie S King, Silvia Cohn, Anne Efron, Richard E Chaisson, Jonathan E Golub • 29 HIV clinics in Rio de Janeiro. • Staff trained in TB screening, TST and INH. • Clinics randomly allocated to date of starting the intervention. 2 clinics started every 2 months starting from Sept 2005, until Aug 2009 • Outcome: TB incidence +/- death A randomized trial to compare 4 months Rifampin vs 9 months INH for the treatment of LTBI Phase 1: Compliance and completion Completed in 2003 Phase 2 – Adverse events and costs Completed in 2007 Phase 3: Efficacy and effectiveness Enrolment completed in 2014: 840 children, 6020 adults Follow-up will finish in 2016 Publication in ??? Thanks