Adaptive treatment strategies in chronic disease

An adaptive treatment strategy (ATS) is a rule for adapting a treatment plan to a patient's history of previous treatments and the response to those treatments. The ongoing management of chronic disease defines an ATS, which may be implicit and hidden or explicit and well-specified. The ATS is...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annual review of medicine 2008-01, Vol.59 (1), p.443-453
Hauptverfasser: Lavori, Philip W, Dawson, Ree
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container_title Annual review of medicine
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creator Lavori, Philip W
Dawson, Ree
description An adaptive treatment strategy (ATS) is a rule for adapting a treatment plan to a patient's history of previous treatments and the response to those treatments. The ongoing management of chronic disease defines an ATS, which may be implicit and hidden or explicit and well-specified. The ATS is characterized by the use of intermediate, early markers of response to dynamically alter treatment decisions, in order to achieve a favorable ultimate outcome. We illustrate the ATS concept and describe how the effect of initial treatment decisions depends on the performance of subsequent decisions at later stages. We show how to compare two or more ATSs, or to determine an optimal ATS, using a sequential multiple assignment randomized (SMAR) trial. Designers of clinical trials might find the ATS concept useful in improving the efficiency and ecological relevance of clinical trials.
doi_str_mv 10.1146/annurev.med.59.062606.122232
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source Annual Reviews; MEDLINE
subjects Chronic Disease - therapy
Chronic illnesses
Clinical outcomes
Clinical Protocols
Clinical trials
Efficiency
Humans
Medical treatment
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
title Adaptive treatment strategies in chronic disease
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