THERAPY
Was the assignment of patients to treatment randomized?
Were all patients who entered the trial accounted for and attributed at its conclusion?
Were patients, clinicians and study personnel kept “blind” to treatment received?
Were the groups similar at the start of the trial?
Aside from the experimental intervention were the groups treated equally?
How large is the treatment effect?
How precise is the estimate of the treatment effect?
Can the results be applied to my patients?
Were all clinically relevant outcomes considered?
Are the benefits worth the harms and costs?
References: JAMA 1993; 270:2598-2601, JAMA 1994; 271:59-63
Outcome
+ - Risk of Outcome:
Treated (Y) a b Y = a/(a+b)
Treated (X) c d X = c/(c+d)
Relative Risk, or
Risk Radio, is the ratio of risk in
the treated group (Y) to the risk in the control group (X): RR = Y/X
Relative Risk Reduction is the percent reduction in risk in the treated group (Y) compared to controls (X):
RRR = 1 – RR = (1 – Y/X) x 100%
or RRR = [(X – Y)/X] x 100%
Absolute Risk Reduction is the difference in risk between control group (X) and the treated group (Y): ARR = X - Y
Number Needed to Treat is the inverse of the ARR: NNT = 1/ARR = 1/(X – Y)
“An NNT of 15, means that 15 patients must be treated over a given period
of time to prevent one adverse outcome”
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Clinical Trial (pt)
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Randomized Controlled Trial (pt)
[see ACP J Club 1994 Jul-Aug; A10-A12]