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Here you will find an explanation of what a randomised trial is and the different phases of trials.  Click on the links below to jump to a topic:

What is a randomised controlled trial?

Many clinical trials are randomised controlled trials (RCTs).  Clinical trials aim to make a fair comparison between a new treatment and the existing treatment, or between two (or more) existing treatments, to see which one works best.

A controlled trial compares two groups of people: an experimental group who receive the new treatment and a control group, who receive the existing treatment or a placebo.  The control group allows the researchers to see whether the treatment they are testing is any more or less effective than the existing treatment.

If you take part in a randomised controlled trial, you will usually have an equal chance of receiving any of the treatments being compared.  The decision about which treatment you’ll receive is random – based on chance.  A computer programme will allocate which treatment you’ll receive, not you or the doctor.  This is called randomisation.

Randomisation ensures that the two groups of people in a trial are as similar as possible, except for the treatment they receive.  This is important because it means that researchers can be sure that any differences in outcomes between the groups are therefore only due to the treatment.

Randomisation is also the best way of ensuring that the results of trials are not biased by the way treatments are selected. For example, if a doctor chose which treatment a patient should receive as part of a trial, she or he might give the new treatment to sicker patients, or to younger patients.  This would make the results of a trial unreliable. Randomisation helps prevent this kind of bias.

Across the world, randomised controlled trials are now seen as the most reliable way to test new treatments and to compare two (or more) existing treatments, to see which one works best.

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Different phases of trials

New treatments usually have to go through a series of phases to test whether they are safe and effective.  New drugs go through a number of different phases of trials:

  • Phase I trials aim to test the safety of a new treatment. They look at side effects of a treatment – for example, does it make people sick, raise their blood pressure etc? Phase I trials involve only a small number of people, who are often healthy volunteers.
  • Phase II trials test the new treatment in a larger group of people who usually have the disease for which the treatment is to be used, to see whether the treatment is safe and has some effect. Usually less than one hundred people are involved at this stage.

Treatments only move into a phase III clinical trial if phases I and II have been successful.

At the MRC Clinical Trials Unit, most of the trials we run are phase III trials.  Phase III trials test the new treatment in a larger group of people.  They look at how well the new treatment works, and at any side effects it may cause.  Phase III trials usually last longer than phase II trials.

In phase III trials, and sometimes in phase II trials, patients are usually randomised to receive the new treatment, the current treatment or sometimes a placebo.

Often several thousand patients will be involved in a phase III trial.  These trials may involve different hospitals in different countries.  At the MRC Clinical Trials Unit, we run phase III trials across Europe, parts of Africa, South America and the USA.

Phase III trials often need to involve large numbers of people because researchers usually need to be able to measure quite modest differences between treatments.  The smaller the expected advantage of one treatment over another, the more people will be needed to take part in a trial.

Phase IV trials usually look at the overall risks and benefits of a drug or treatment.

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Last Update Date : 7/6/2009