Other study design choices may limit generalisability

In multi-national studies the general level of care (concomitant therapies, access to technologies, patent support programmes) received by trial participants in some healthcare systems or study sites may differ from usual practice in the healthcare system of interest. This may have implications for the generalisability of the effectiveness results to that system. Recruitment of study participants may require a specific diagnostic activity that is currently not part of usual practice. Clinicians’ or participants’ willingness to participate or complete the trial may not be independent of factors such as adherence or underlying risk, which may be associated with effectiveness. This may be important when considering the applicability of results from studies in highly-resourced healthcare systems such as US, with increased access to sophisticated diagnostic and monitoring services as well as high-intensity care, to local populations where such services may not be available. If the effect of the medicine itself cannot be isolated from trial setting, then the combination of setting and intervention may need to be considered more broadly as an intervention strategy in its own right.

 

Other study design choices may limit generalisability

In multi-national studies the general level of care (concomitant therapies, access to technologies, patent support programmes) received by trial participants in some healthcare systems or study sites may differ from usual practice in the healthcare system of interest. This may have implications for the generalisability of the effectiveness results to that system. Recruitment of study participants may require a specific diagnostic activity that is currently not part of usual practice. Clinicians’ or participants’ willingness to participate or complete the trial may not be independent of factors such as adherence or underlying risk, which may be associated with effectiveness. This may be important when considering the applicability of results from studies in highly-resourced healthcare systems such as US, with increased access to sophisticated diagnostic and monitoring services as well as high-intensity care, to local populations where such services may not be available. If the effect of the medicine itself cannot be isolated from trial setting, then the combination of setting and intervention may need to be considered more broadly as an intervention strategy in its own right.

 

Trial settings and sites do not reflect usual clinical practice

In multi-national studies the general level of care (concomitant therapies, access to technologies, patent support programmes) received by trial participants in some healthcare systems or study sites may differ from usual practice in the healthcare system of interest. This may have implications for the generalisability of the effectiveness results to that system. Recruitment of study participants may require a specific diagnostic activity that is currently not part of usual practice. Clinicians’ or participants’ willingness to participate or complete the trial may not be independent of factors such as adherence or underlying risk, which may be associated with effectiveness. This may be important when considering the applicability of results from studies in highly-resourced healthcare systems such as US, with increased access to sophisticated diagnostic and monitoring services as well as high-intensity care, to local populations where such services may not be available. If the effect of the medicine itself cannot be isolated from trial setting, then the combination of setting and intervention may need to be considered more broadly as an intervention strategy in its own right.

 

Trial settings and sites do not reflect usual clinical practice

In multi-national studies the general level of care (concomitant therapies, access to technologies, patent support programmes) received by trial participants in some healthcare systems or study sites may differ from usual practice in the healthcare system of interest. This may have implications for the generalisability of the effectiveness results to that system. Recruitment of study participants may require a specific diagnostic activity that is currently not part of usual practice. Clinicians’ or participants’ willingness to participate or complete the trial may not be independent of factors such as adherence or underlying risk, which may be associated with effectiveness. This may be important when considering the applicability of results from studies in highly-resourced healthcare systems such as US, with increased access to sophisticated diagnostic and monitoring services as well as high-intensity care, to local populations where such services may not be available. If the effect of the medicine itself cannot be isolated from trial setting, then the combination of setting and intervention may need to be considered more broadly as an intervention strategy in its own right.

 

Trial treatment pathway is not generalisable to usual practice

‘Treatment pathway’ refers to the sequence of previous treatments received, based on patient selection criteria and response to previous therapies, often reflected in clinical guidelines. Assessment of the position in the treatment pathway drives the definition of the treatment population and choice of appropriate comparator. This pathway may have changed during the course of the trial if a new medicine has been approved or new clinical guidelines have been implemented locally. In some cases, the introduction of the medicine of interest will itself alter the treatment pathway. Alternatively there may not yet be an established treatment pathway or sequencing, and as a result there may be variations across countries or health centres within countries.

 

Trial treatment pathway is not generalisable to usual practice

‘Treatment pathway’ refers to the sequence of previous treatments received, based on patient selection criteria and response to previous therapies, often reflected in clinical guidelines. Assessment of the position in the treatment pathway drives the definition of the treatment population and choice of appropriate comparator. This pathway may have changed during the course of the trial if a new medicine has been approved or new clinical guidelines have been implemented locally. In some cases, the introduction of the medicine of interest will itself alter the treatment pathway. Alternatively there may not yet be an established treatment pathway or sequencing, and as a result there may be variations across countries or health centres within countries.