AI Article Synopsis

  • Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are considered the gold standard for medical research, focusing on their efficacy in specific patient groups, while real-world studies assess how treatments work in broader, routine clinical settings.
  • Real-world evidence has shown that treatment outcomes for conditions like neovascular age-related macular degeneration can differ significantly from RCT results, emphasizing the value of these studies in understanding actual patient experiences and care needs.
  • Expanding real-world studies to include various patient outcomes, such as quality of life, could provide crucial insights for healthcare decision-makers, benefiting physicians, patients, and regulators alike.

Article Abstract

Randomized controlled trials are the gold standard in medical research, providing evidence of the efficacy of a treatment in well-defined patient populations. By contrast, real-world studies explore the effectiveness of treatments in routine clinical practice, often with diverse patient populations. Although both randomized controlled trials and real-world studies contribute to the understanding of the benefits and risks of therapies, they generate different types of data and serve complementary purposes. Real-world studies evaluating the management of neovascular age-related macular degeneration have shown that visual outcomes achieved with anti-vascular endothelial growth factor in clinical practice often differ from those derived from clinical trials, highlighting the importance of assessing such outcomes in real-world studies. Benefits include finding variations in treatment provision, leading to: service improvements; the understanding of the need for continued and higher than previously provided treatment frequency; and new treatment regimens such as treat-and-extend. There is potential for the scope of real-world studies to be expanded to include other patient outcomes, such as quality of life, thus providing decision-makers with additional information to complement the data collected in randomized controlled trials. Physicians, patients, and regulators stand to gain much from further development and the conduct of real-world studies. We provide an overview of the importance of real-world evidence in the management of neovascular age-related macular degeneration with anti-vascular endothelial growth factor therapy, describe sources of real-world evidence, and assess the relative strengths and limitations of randomized controlled trials and real-world studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.survophthal.2019.02.008DOI Listing

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