NIHR Research Design Service London Enabling Better Research Forming a research team Victoria Cornelius, PhD Senior Lecturer in Medical Statistics Deputy Director RDS London
Dec 14, 2015
NIHR Research Design Service LondonEnabling Better Research
Forming a research teamVictoria Cornelius, PhD
Senior Lecturer in Medical Statistics Deputy Director RDS London
Multidisciplinary teams
• Multidisciplinary team is required to undertake high quality research of national/ international importance
• Involve team members at all stages of application development
• Led by a Principle Investigator with substantial research experience (it sometimes ok for less experienced PIs to be supported by an experienced team)
Who should be in the team?
• What’s Research questions are going to be addressed?
• What components are included?– Health economics– Quantitative assessment– Qualitative evaluation– Changing beliefs/behaviour– Organisational/service deliver assessment
Team membersLikely core members– Clinical expert in the disease and population being studied– Team member with expertise in the intervention being
studied– A patient or member of the public (yes on the team!)
As required:• Statistician• Clinical Trials Methodologist (from CTU ? or elsewhere) • Health Economist• Health Psychologist • Qualitative expert
Team Working
Do I need a CTU?• If undertaking a clinical trial then strongly recommended
to obtain support from a registered CTU• HTA and EME will expect partnership with CTU• Pilot and feasibility stage?• KCTU offer a range of services and are occasionally able
to become co-applicants • Discuss your grant application with them early• CTU models of working vary nationallyList of registered CTU
http://www.ukcrc.org/infrastructure/ctu/
How do I find these co-applicants?
Its not easy!• Sometimes RDS can help• If you have CTU support they may be able to suggest• Ask around. There may be suitable members in your
department or approach the relevant department in your university
• If you fail to find what you are looking for cost in some external consultancy
Balancing costs• All funding committees are looking for
‘Value for money’• Map out roles and responsibilities– Ensure you only cost required grade to undertake these
duties
• Limit Senior input time to provide oversight • If necessary negotiate with your co-applicants• However, be realistic about the time required– 1% FTE equates to 2-3 working days per year
NIHR Research Design Service LondonEnabling Better Research
NIHR funding streams and study design
Victoria Cornelius, PhD
What's in a name?
• NIHR (agreed by EME, PHR, HTA and RfPB) have very clear definitions for study design
• Diagnostic Utility, Diagnostic Accuracy• Feasibility study, Pilot study
Diagnostic studiesDiagnostic test: indicator or predictor of diseaseCan include: diagnostic test, screening test, treatment monitoring
• Development of a test (MRC, possibly i4i)• Diagnostic accuracy: examine the clinical validity of a
test (typically RfPB) (observational where often participants undertake ref and new test; no controls required; Outputs expected are Se, Sp, PPV, NPV)
• Diagnostic utility: examine the value of test in improving patient outcomes (typically EME HTA) (often RCT design)
Pilot Studies• Pilot studies are a smaller version of the main study • Used to test whether the components of the main study can all work
together• It resembles the main study in many respects, including an assessment of
the primary outcome• Data from the pilot phase may contribute to the final analysis: internal
pilot (but must be planned in advanced)
Study should not be powered to detect a statistically significant differenceClear progression criteria to the substantive study should be described
Feasibility studies“Can this study be done?”Typical aims include:• Estimate standard deviation of the outcome measure (do you really need to do this?)• willingness of participants to be randomised;• willingness of clinicians to recruit participants;• number of eligible patients, carers or other appropriate participants• characteristics of the proposed outcome measure and in some cases feasibility studies might
involve designing a suitable outcome measure; • follow-up rates, response rates to questionnaires, adherence/compliance rates, ICCs in cluster
trials, etc.• availability of data needed or the usefulness and limitations of a particular database• time needed to collect and analyse data
What is it you don't know such that you can’t design the main trial?
RfPB
• Reluctant to fund pilot studies• Rationale : Working with the NIHR definitions all pilots should
be ‘internal pilots’ and this unlikely to afforded within RfPB so go to HTA or EME
• To speed up pathway to patient benefit• If you cant design the substantive trial at the pilot stage then
what is it you don't know? This is then a ‘feasibility study’• Trying to stop funding ‘underpowered’ trials that are not
subsequently followed up with substantive trial.• Phase II ( surrogate end points) decision not so clear