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WORKING WITH CLINICIANS & OTHER SCIENTISTS

WORKING WITH CLINICIANS & OTHER SCIENTISTS. Chap Le.

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WORKING WITH CLINICIANS & OTHER SCIENTISTS

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  1. WORKING WITH CLINICIANS & OTHER SCIENTISTS Chap Le

  2. Science is built upon rigorous observation and experimentation. Biostatistics - the application of statistics to understanding health and biology - provides powerful tools for developing questions, designing studies, refining measurements, and analyzing data. A biostatistician’s unique contribution to a research team is founded on quantifying uncertainty in and generating sound inferences from data. Because of the increasing complexity and quantity of health-related data, the need for biostatistics expertise and the need for biostatisticians are expanding and evolving.

  3. Biostatistics contributions take one of the two forms: Consultation and Collaboration. Statistical consultation is often unplanned, less organized, and aimed at smaller projects. Groups that focus on consultation provide a valuable service but fail to maximize the contributions biostatisticians can make to research. In those organizations, biostatistics is sometimes regarded as an ancillary service rather than an academic discipline; investigators or clinical departments expect biostatisticians to fill a perceived service role.

  4. In more modern Medical Centers, especially Academic Medical Centers, Biostatistics supports are organized in a way where the field has a strong identity – as an academic discipline , which spurs intellectual growth, values methodological contributions to health-related research. And contributions are made through collaborations where biostatisticians get involved early and in a continuing manner in each and all projects, from developing questions, designing studies, refining measurements, to analyzing data, and publishing results.

  5. All of us in applied environment still provide some statistical consultation – because not all investigators are experienced; but even those gradually becoming more like “mentoring” instead of consulting. Those who have been around for a while are often involved in more meaningful, more rewarding collaborations. So, where do we contribute? The following few slides provide a simple picture of the makeup of a research project.

  6. Finishing Truth in The Universe Truth in The Study Findings in The Study Research Question Study Plan Study Data Starting

  7. The biggest thread or the most important component in research is the concept of “validity”. It involves the assessment against accepted standards; we have to be sure that the evaluation covers its intended target or targets.

  8. INFERENCES & VALIDITIES Two major levels of inferences are involved in interpreting the results/findings of a study: • The first level concernsInternal validity;the degree to which the investigator draws the correct conclusions about what actually happened in the study. • The second level concernsExternal Validity(also referred to asgeneralizabilityorinference); the degree to which these conclusions could be appropriately applied to people and events outside the study.

  9. External Validity Internal Validity Truth in The Universe Truth in The Study Findings in The Study Research Question Study Plan Study Data Biostatistics contributes to both internal validity (dealing with missing data, refining measurements, analyzing data) and external validity (helping to develop research question, designing study, estimating sample size)

  10. Clinical Research Population Research T2 T1 Laboratory Research Studies can be grouped into there areas: Population, Laboratory, and Clinical; plus Translational Research, the component of basic science that interacts with clinical (T1) or with population research (T2).

  11. THE ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGYOF CLINICAL RESEARCH We form or evaluate a research or research project from/on two different angles or parts: the anatomy and the physiology of research; just like the hardware and software to run a computer operation.

  12. THE ANATOMY PART • From the anatomy of the research, one can describe/see what it’s made of; this includes the tangible elements of the study plan: research question, design, subjects, measurements, sample size calculation, etc… • The goal is to create these elements in a form that will make the project feasible, efficient, and cost-effective.

  13. THE PHYSIOLOGY PART • From the physiology of the research, one can describe/see how it works; first about what happened in the study sample and then about how study findings generalized to people outside the study. • The goalis to minimize the errors that threaten conclusions based on these inferences.

  14. THE PROTOCOL • The structure of a Research Project,bothits anatomy and physiology parts, are described in its protocol; the written part of the study. • The Protocol have a vital scientific function to help the investigator organize his/her research in a logical, focused, & efficient way.

  15. COMPONENTS OF THE PROTOCOL • Research Question:What is the objective of the study, the uncertainty the investigator wants to resolve? • Background and Significance:Why these questions important? • Design:How is the study structured? • Subjects:Who are the subjects and how they will be selected and recruited. • Variables:What measurements will be made: predictors, confounders, and outcomes. • Statistical Considerations:How large is the study andhow will data be analyzed (“Design” is an important statistical component but listed in the Design Section).

  16. You can see “Statistical Fingerprints” everywhere! But productive contributions require some understanding of the “Content Sciences”. That’s why many statisticians are gradually specialized in only a few areas of biomedical research.

  17. SOME PROJECTS in Chap Le’s Portfolio: (1) P01: Biology and Transplantation of the Human Stem Cell Director: Phil McGlave; NCI: 7/1/10-6/30/15 This program project has three projects, all are in Minnesota; They focus on three important issues in the UCB transplant setting: 1) graft versus host disease (GVHD); 2) delayed immune reconstitution with resultant late infection; and 3) refractory or relapsed leukemia. Statisticians: Chap Le (Core Director), Qing Cao, Todd DeFor, Bruce Lindgren, Xianghua Luo, and Ryan Shanley. (2)P01: NK Cells, Their Receptors and Unrelated Donor Transplant Director: Jeff Miller; NCI: 9/1/10-7/31/15 This Program includes a group of international experts in NK cell biology and bone marrow transplantation collaborating to investigate the relevance of NK alloreactivity in URD HCT, a setting where KIR repertoires differ in nearly all donor-recipient pairs. This program project has three projects; one is here in Minnesota, one at Stanford University, and the third one is a multi-center randomized Clinical Trial with a PI here. Statisticians: Chap Le (Core Director), Todd DeFor, Xianghua Luo, and Yan Zhang.

  18. SOME PROJECTS in Chap Le’s Portfolio: (3) P30: Cancer Center Support Grant (CCSG) Director: Doug Yee; NCI: 6/1/98-1/31/14 The Masonic Cancer Center has 8 research programs (Cancer Outcomes and Survivorship, Carcinogenesis and Chemoprevention, Genetic Mechanisms of Cancers, Immunology, Prevention and Etiology, Transplant Biology and Therapy, Tumor Microenvironment, and Cell Signaling); Biostatistics and Bioinformatics is one of its 13 Shared Resources. Statisticians: Chap Le (Core Director), Haitao Chu, Yen-Yi Ho, Robin Bliss, Todd DeFor, Bruce Lindgren, and Yan Zhang. (4) P30: Minnesota Obesity Center Director: Allen Levine; NIDDK: 9/30/1995 -3/31/2016 The Center has 73 active investigators with 137 funded projects related to obesity, energy metabolism and eating disorders and is one of 12 funded Nutrition Obesity Research Centers; statisticians are part of the Biostatistics and Epidemiology Core led by Dr. Robert Jeffery of Epidemiology/SPH (basic rationale is the relationship between obesity and cancers). Statisticians: Chap Le, Robin Bliss, and Yan Zhang.

  19. SOME PROJECTS in Chap Le’s Portfolio: (5) P50 (SPORE): UAB/UMN SPORE in Pancreatic Cancer Directors: Donald Buchsbaum (Alabama) and Selwyn Vickers (Minnesota); NCI: 8/15/2010-6/30/2015 This SPORE has four projects; two are in Birmingham, one here in Minnesota, and one with Co-PIs in both campuses. Statisticians: Chap Le (Core Co-Director), Yen-Yi Ho, and Bruce Lindgren, and (for pilot projects) Xianghua Luo, Aaron Sarver, and Ryan Shanley. (6) U54: Evaluating New Nicotine Standards for Cigarettes Directors: Eric Donny (Pittsburgh) and Dorothy Hatsukami (Minnesota); NIDA-FDA: 9/15/11-6/30/16 This specialized research center has four projects; one is a multi-center clinical trial headquartered here in Minnesota, two at Pittsburgh and one at Brown. Statisticians: Chap Le (Core Director), Qing Cao, Bruce Lindgren, Xianghua Luo, and Joseph Koopmeiners.

  20. SOME PROJECTS in Chap Le’s Portfolio: (7) U19: Models for Tobacco Products Evaluation Director: Dorothy Hatsukami; NCI: 9/20/12-9/19/17 The overall goal of this Program Project is to provide scientists and regulatory agencies scientifically-based guidelines with methods and measures for the evaluation of tobacco products. The new program includes four projects – all are here in Minnesota. Statisticians: Chap Le (Core Director), Robin Bliss, Yen-Yi Ho, Bruce Lindgren, and Yan Zhang. (8)R01: Randomized Trial of PEITC as a Modifier of NNK Metabolism Principal Investigator: J. Yuan; NCI: 4/1/08-1/31/13 The primary aim is to assess, via a cross-over design Clinical Trial, the effect of PEITC supplementation (at 40 mg per day) as a modifier of NNK metabolism in smokers. Statistician: Chap Le (9) R01: Green Tea and Reduction of Breast Cancer Risk. Principal Investigator: M. Kurzer; NCI: 9/11/08-7/31/13 The primary aim is to gain full understanding of the mechanisms by which tea catechins inhibit breast carcinogenesis in humans. It’s a controlled randomized Clinical Trial. Statistician: Chap Le

  21. Issue of the Day Some people say that working with other scientists, as a statistical consultant is depressing because “the docs boss you around”, is it true?

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