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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2003;125:784-786
© 2003 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery
Editorials |
From the Section of Thoracic Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.
Received for publication July 1, 2002. Accepted for publication July 15, 2002. Address for reprints: Michael S. Mulligan, MD, Surgical Director, Lung Transplantation, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University of Washington, Box 356310, 1959 NE Pacific St, Box 356310, AA-115, Seattle, WA 98195-6310.
| The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below. |
See related article on page 891.
It is often difficult, or even impossible, for surgeons to answer some important questions in the context of a prospective, randomized clinical trial. Although the randomized trial is the gold standard for comparing two therapeutic interventions, a number of statistical, practical, and ethical considerations, combined with our own preconceived ideas, usually prevent the contemplation of a randomized trial. A common problem may be that limited patient numbers or small differences between treatments may prevent a large enough trial to provide a valid statistical power to detect legitimate treatment differences. In fact, the majority of randomized surgical trials are flawed by this very lack of a power calculation in the original trial design.
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In other cases, a preponderance of phase II clinical trial data may make it appear unethical to assign patients to one of the arms of a randomized study. This is often difficult to disconnect from the separate problem of surgeon bias. However, these are distinct and should not be confused or intertwined. When a preponderance of the informed medical community believes that one treatment is better on the basis of clinical experience and scientific outcomes, random treatment assignment becomes unethical. However, if a given physician, or group of physicians, believes strongly in treatment efficacy, yet is balanced by an informed but skeptical group of physicians, this creates the setting of clinical equipoise, a condition of legitimate professional uncertainty about the optimal treatment. We as surgeons have been quick to accept simple case series, often from a single institution, as adequate proof of efficacy, limiting our ability or willingness to subject these questions to the more rigorous examination of a randomized clinical trial.
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Dr Zuckermann and his colleagues
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Related Article
J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2003 125: 891-900.
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