OCI Term Compilation (Jennifer)
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source | draft category | term / definition |
CDISCglossary | unscheduled | adverse event (AE). Synonyms: side effect, adverse experience. |
CDISCglossary | role | analysis variables. |
CDISCglossary | document | approval letter. An official communication from FDA;allow marketing |
CDISCglossary | time | arm. A planned sequence of elements, typically equivalent to a treatment group. [SDTM] |
CDISCglossary | protocol | audit |
CDISCglossary | protocol | baseline assessment |
CDISCglossary | document | Biologics Licensing Application (BLA). An application to FDA for a license to market |
CDISCglossary | study design | blinded study. A study in which is unaware of the treatment assignment |
CDISCglossary | data | causality assessment. An evaluation performed by a medical professional |
CDISCglossary | quality | clinical benefit. |
CDISCglossary | data | clinical clarification. A query resolution from the sponsor See also self evident change. |
CDISCglossary | quality | clinical efficacy. |
CDISCglossary | quality | clinical significance. Change in a subject’s clinical condition regarded as important whether or not due to the test intervention. criteria for clinical significance should be stated in the protocol. |
CDISCglossary | data | clinical trial information. Data collected in the course of a clinical trial |
CDISCglossary | document | Common Technical Document. A format agreed upon by ICH See also eCTD. |
CDISCglossary | data | confidentiality. Prevention of |
CDISCglossary | study design | confirmatory trial. Phase 3 trial during which the previously revealed are confirmed. |
CDISCglossary | person role | consumer safety officer (CSO). FDA official who coordinates the review |
CDISCglossary | role | control group. The group of subjects |
CDISCglossary | person role | coordinating investigator. |
CDISCglossary | statistics | covariate (prognostic). Factor or condition that influences outcome of a trial. |
CDISCglossary | document | curriculum vitae (cv). |
CDISCglossary | organization role | data and safety monitoring board (DSMB). See data monitoring committee. |
CDISCglossary | document | data clarification form. A form used to query an investigator and collect feedback to resolve questions |
CDISCglossary | data | data integrity. An attribute of data |
CDISCglossary | data | data model. Unambiguous, formally stated, expression of items, the relationship among items, and the structure of the data in a certain problem area or context of use. |
CDISCglossary | protocol | decision rule. Succinct statement of |
CDISCglossary | data | discrepancy. The failure of a datapoint to pass a validation check. NOTE: |
CDISCglossary | disease. Any deviation from or interruption of the normal structure orfunction of a part, organ, or system of the body as manifested by characteristic symptoms and signs. | |
CDISCglossary | quality | dosage form. Physical characteristicsof a drug product, (e.g., tablet,capsule, or solution) that contains adrug substance, generally |
CDISCglossary | quality | dosage strength. 1. Proportion of active substance to excipient, measured in units of volume or concentration. 2.The strength of a drug product. tells how much of the active ingredient is present in each dosage. |
CDISCglossary | science | drug development process. The |
CDISCglossary | role | drug product. 1. A dosage form thatcontains an active drug ingredient orplacebo; 2. A finished dosage form asdescribed in regulations. [SPL Glossary] |
CDISCglossary | data | effect. An effect attributed to a treatment in a clinical trial. In most clinical trials, the treatment effect of interest is a comparison (or contrast) of two or more treatments. |
CDISCglossary | quality | effectiveness. The desired measure of a drug’s influence on a disease or condition as demonstrated by substantial evidence from adequate and well-controlled investigations. |
CDISCglossary | quality | efficacy. The capacity of a drug ortreatment to produce beneficial effects |
CDISCglossary | time | element. 1. In trial design, a basicbuilding block for time within a clinicaltrial comprising the followingcharacteristics: a description of what happens to the subject during the element; a definition of the start of the element; a rule for ending the element. |
CDISCglossary | data | endpoint. Variable that pertains tothe efficacy or safety evaluations of a |
CDISCglossary | aggregate population | enrollment (cumulative). Current enrollment as well as any ever-enrolled subjects who have ended participation. |
CDISCglossary | time | epoch. An interval of time in the planned conduct of a study during which the treatment is consistent. Synonyms: period, cycle, phase, stage. |
CDISCglossary | quality | equipoise. A state in which an investigator is uncertain about which arm of a clinical trial would be therapeutically superior for a patient. |
CDISCglossary | document | eSource document (electronic |
CDISCglossary | organization role | Ethics Committees |
CDISCglossary | protocol | exclusion criteria. List of |
CDISCglossary | conclusion | finding. A meaningful interpretation of data or observations resulting from planned evaluations. Compare to conclusion, hypothesis. |
CDISCglossary | conclusion | global assessment variable. A single variable, usually a scale of ordered categorical ratings, which integrates objective variables and the investigator’s overall impression about the state or change in state of asubject. |
CDISCglossary | hypothesis | hypothesis to test. In a trial, a statement relating to the possible different effect of the interventions on an outcome. The null hypothesis of no such effect is amenable to explicit statistical evaluation by a hypothesistest, which generates a P value. |
CDISCglossary | protocol | inclusion criteria. The criteria in a protocol that prospective subjects must meet to be eligible for participation in a study. NOTE: Exclusion and inclusion criteria define the study population.See also exclusion criteria.independent data monitoring |
CDISCglossary | computer | Internet service provider (ISP). A |
CDISCglossary | quality | inter-rater reliability. The property of scales yielding equivalent results when used by different raters ondifferent occasions. |
CDISCglossary | role | intervention. The drug, device, therapy or process under investigationin a clinical trial which has an effect on outcome of interest in a study: e.g.,health-related quality of life, efficacy,safety, pharmacoeconomics. Synonyms:therapeutic intervention, medical product. See also: test articles; devices; |
CDISCglossary | role | investigational product. A pharmaceutical form of an active ingredient or placebo being tested or used as a reference in a clinical trial |
CDISCglossary | role | investigational treatment. An intervention under investigation in a clinical trial. |
CDISCglossary | investigator/institution. An expression meaning “the investigator and/or institution, where required by the applicable regulatory requirements”. | |
CDISCglossary | data | item definition. 1. In a questionnaire or form to be completed in a clinical trial, the specification of a question and the specification of the format and semantics of the response.2. Formal specification of the properties of an item or field of data in an eClinical trial. |
CDISCglossary | Janus. 1. A logical design conceivedby Dr. Norman Stockbridge of the FDAfor a data warehouse intended to integrate submission data, protocol descriptions and analysis plans from clinical and animal studies into as an FDA review environment that uses a set of validated, standards-based tools toallow reproducible cross-study, datamining and retrospective comparative analysis. 2) the name assigned to acomponent of the NCI’s CaBIG ClinicalResearch Information Exchange (CRIX) | |
CDISCglossary | time | last subject out/complete(LSC/LPC or LSO/LPO). 1. The dateand time when the last subject hasreached a planned or achievedmilestone representing the completionof the trial. 2. The last subject tocomplete a trial. See also subject, pt, completion |
CDISCglossary | time | legal authentication. A completion status in which a document has been signed manually or electronically by the individual who is legally responsible for that document. |
CDISCglossary | role | medicinal product. Synonym for therapeutic intervention, but usually a drug. |
CDISCglossary | data model | model. A formal structure for representing and analyzing a process such as a clinical trial or the information pertaining to a restricted context, e.g., clinical trial data. |
CDISCglossary | document | Nuremberg Code. Code of ethics,set forth in 1947, for conducting human medical research.objective. The reason for performing a trial in terms of the scientific questions to be answered by the analysis of data collected during the trial. NOTE: The primary objective is the main question to be answered and drives any statistical planning for the trial (e.g., calculation of the sample size to provide the appropriate power for statistical testing). |
CDISCglossary | data | objective measurement. A measurement of a physiological or medical variable such as blood glucose level that is obtained by a measuring device rather than a human judgment or assessment. See also outcome, patient-reported outcome; |
CDISCglossary | time | open to enrollment. The status of a study such that a subject can be enrolled into that study. |
CDISCglossary | standard | operational model. The set of CDISC data standards (including ODMand LAB) used to capture and archive data from clinical trials. |
CDISCglossary | data | outcome (of adverse event).Refers to the resolution of an adverse event. NOTE: often denoted using a pick list from a controlled terminology such as: Recovered/resolved,recovering/ resolving, not recovered/notresolved, recovered /resolved with sequelae, fatal, or unknown |
CDISCglossary | data | outcome. 1. Events or experiences that clinicians or investigators examining the impact of an intervention or exposure measure because they believe such events or experiences may be influenced by the intervention or exposure. 2. SDTM; The result of carrying out a mathematical or statistical procedure. NOTE:outcome is more general than endpoint in that it does not necessarily relate to a planned objective |
CDISCglossary | mixed | packaging. The material, both physical and informational, that contains or accompanies a marketed or investigational therapeutic agent once it is fully prepared for release to patients and/or subjects in clinical trials. |
CDISCglossary | data | patient-reported outcome Patient-reported outcomes are subjective measurements. |
CDISCglossary | role | per-protocol analysis set. The set of data generated by the subset of subjects who complied with the protocol sufficiently to ensure that these data would be likely to exhibit the effects of treatment according to the underlying scientific model. |
CDISCglossary | protocol | pharmacogenetic test. An assay intended to study inter individual variations in DNA sequence related to drug absorption and disposition or drug action. Compare to pharmacogenomic test. |
CDISCglossary | study design | phase. Clinical trials are generally categorized into four (sometimes five) phases A therapeutic intervention may be evaluated in two or more phases simultaneously in different trials, and some trials may overlap two different phases. |
CDISCglossary | role | primary variable. An outcome of greatest importance to the primary objective of the trial, usually the one used in the sample size calculation.NOTE: Differences between groups in the primary and secondary variable(s)are believed to be the result of the group-specific interventions. |
CDISCglossary | role | product. 1. Drug product: A finished dosage form that contains a drug substance. 2. A physical entity that isintended to diagnose, treat, or preventa disease or other abnormal condition,and subject to regulatory authority |
CDISCglossary | protocol | protocol approval (Sponsor).Sponsor action at the completion of protocol development that is marked when the signature of the last reviewer on the protocol approval form has been obtained, signifying that all reviewer changes to the protocol have been incorporated |
CDISCglossary | unscheduled | protocol violation. A significant departure from processes or procedures that were required by the protocol.Violations often result in data that are not deemed evaluable for a per protocol analyis, and may require that the subject(s) who violate the protocol |
CDISCglossary | person role | proxy respondent. Someone other than the patient who is responding about the patient on behalf of the patient, not as an observer. Compare to observer assessment. |
CDISCglossary | statistics | qualitative variable. One that cannot be measured on a continuum and represented in quantitative relation to a scale (race or sex, for example). Data that fit into discrete categoriesaccording to their attributes. |
CDISCglossary | quality | quality of life. A broad ranging concept that incorporates an individual’s physical health, psychological state, level of independence, social relationships,personal beliefs and their relationships to salient features of the environment. |
CDISCglossary | document | query. A request for clarification on a data item collected for a clinical trial;specifically a request from a sponsor or sponsor’s representative to an investigator to resolve an error or inconsistency discovered during data review. |
CDISCglossary | statistics | random number table. |
CDISCglossary | statistics | random sample. Members of a population selected by a method designed to ensure that each person in the target group has an equal chance of selection.randomization. The process of assigning trial subjects to treatment or |
CDISCglossary | data | raw data. Data as originally collected.Distinct from derived. Raw data includes records of original observations, measurements, and activities (such as laboratory notes,evaluations, data recorded by automated instruments) |
CDISCglossary | time | recruitment period. Time period during which subjects are or are planned to be enrolled in a clinical trial. |
CDISCglossary | data model | Reference Information Model(RIM). An information model used as the ultimate defining reference for al lHL7 standards. |
CDISCglossary | data | registry. A data bank of information on clinical trials for drugs for serious or life-threatening diseases and conditions. |
CDISCglossary | quality | reliability, psychometric. The degree to which a psychometric “instrument” is free from random error either by testing the homogeneity of content on multi-item tests with internal consistency evaluation or testing the degree to which the instrument yields stable scores over time |
CDISCglossary | hypothesis | research hypothesis. The proposition that a study sets out to support (or disprove); for example,“blood pressure will be lowered by[specific endpoint] in subjects who receive the test product.” See also null hypothesis. |
CDISCglossary | data | Researcher’s records of subjects/patients, such as patient medical charts, hospital records, X-rays,and attending physician’s notes. NOTE:These records may or may not accompany an application to a Regulatory Authority, but must be kept |
CDISCglossary | quality | risk. In clinical trials, the probability of harm or discomfort for subjects. NOTE:Acceptable risk differs depending on the condition for which a product is being tested. A product for sore throat,for example, will be expected to have a low incidence of troubling side effects. |
CDISCglossary | quality | safety and tolerability. The safety of a medical product concerns the medical risk to the subject, usually assessed in a clinical trial by laboratory tests (including clinical chemistry and hematology), vital signs, clinical adverse events (diseases, signs andsymptoms), and other special safetytests (e.g., ECGs, ophthalmology). The tolerability of the medical productrepresents the degree to which overt adverse effects can be tolerated by the subject. [ICH E9] |
CDISCglossary | quality | safety. Relative freedom from harm.In clinical trials, this refers to an absence of harmful side effects resulting from use of the product and may be assessed by laboratory testing of biological samples, special tests andprocedures, psychiatric evaluation, |
CDISCglossary | semantic. In the context of a technical specification, semantic refers to the meaning of an element asdistinct from its syntax. Syntax canchange without affecting semantics. | |
CDISCglossary | study design | single-blind study. A study in which one party, either the investigatoror the subject, does not know which medication or placebo is administered to the subject; also called single masked study. See also blind study,double-blind study, triple-blind study. |
CDISCglossary | data | source data. All information in original records and certified copies of original records of clinical findings,observations, or other activities in a clinical trial necessary for the reconstruction and evaluation of the trial. |
FCR | 1. Basic vs applied | |
FCR | 1. Hierarchical – show vertical relationships | |
FCR | quality | 1. Morbidity |
FCR | data | 1. Outcome assessment |
FCR | 1. Physical | |
FCR | protocol | 1. Tradition (precedent) |
FCR | study design | 10. Historical research |
FCR | quality | 10. self-assessment of functional capacity |
FCR | role | 10. Variables – concepts that can be assigned values and thus must be defined operationally by the methods for measuring or evaluating them |
FCR | 11. Propositions – state the relationships between variables | |
FCR | quality | 11. quality of life |
FCR | study design | 11. Randomized clinical trial – controlled comparison of an experimental intervention allowing the assessment of the causes of outcomes |
FCR | data model | 12. Model – symbolic representation of the elements of a system |
FCR | study design | 12. Single-subject design |
FCR | conclusion | 13. Inductive theory – theory based on empirically verifiable observations |
FCR | study design | 13. Sequential clinical trial |
FCR | study design | 14. Evaluation research – assessment of the success of a program or policy |
FCR | conclusion | 14. Hypothetical-deductive theory – theory developed on the basis of great insight and intuitive understanding with few or no prior observations |
FCR | conclusion | 15. Law – a theory that has reached a level of absolute consistency in outcome, thus allowing precise prediction. |
FCR | study design | 15. Quasi-experimental research |
FCR | protocol | 16. Empirical observations => Facts => Conceptual Framework => Theory => Research hypothesis => Facts |
FCR | study design | 16. Meta-analysis – statistically combining findings from several different studies to obtain a summary analysis |
FCR | protocol | 17. Deduction – theory testing |
FCR | study design | 17. Qualitative vs quantitative research |
FCR | protocol | 18. Induction – theory development |
FCR | data | 2. Acute conditions and chronic conditions |
FCR | protocol | 2. Authority (trusted expert) |
FCR | quality | 2. mortality |
FCR | study design | 2. Observational [descriptive (describe populations) vs exploratory (find relationships)] vs experimental (test cause-and-effect relationships through the manipulation of variable) |
FCR | 2. Schematic | |
FCR | time | 2. Temporal – order concepts in time and states a sequence of events |
FCR | study design | 3. Case study – description of one or more patients |
FCR | data | 3. length of stay |
FCR | 3. Process | |
FCR | time | 3. Quantitative – frequency or duration of a specific behavior |
FCR | data | 3. Sources of knowledge |
FCR | protocol | 3. Trial and error |
FCR | study design | 4. Developmental research – description of pattern of change over time |
FCR | protocol | 4. Logical reasoning - Deductive reasoning, Inductive reasoning |
FCR | data | 4. readmission |
FCR | 4. Statistical | |
FCR | science | 4. Types of research |
FCR | study design | 5. Normative research – establishing normal values |
FCR | quality | 5. Physical |
FCR | protocol | 5. Scientific method (establishing cause and effect relationships) – a systematic, empirical, controlled and critical examination of hypothetical propositions about the associations among natural phenomena. |
FCR | study design | 6. Qualitative research – gathering data through interview or observation |
FCR | quality | 6. social |
FCR | data model | 6. Theory – a set of interrelated concepts, definitions or propositions that specifies relationships among variables a represents a systematic view of specific phenomena. A good theory should provide a thorough and rationale explanation of observed facts, and should be economical, important and fluid. |
FCR | study design | 7. Cohort or case-control studies – establish associations |
FCR | hypothesis | 7. Hypothesis - specific predictions based on a theory. |
FCR | quality | 7. psychological well-being |
FCR | data | 8. Concepts – abstraction that allow us to classify natural phenomena and empirical observations |
FCR | study design | 8. Methodological studies – establish reliability and validity of a new method |
FCR | quality | 8. Patient satisfaction |
FCR | data | 9. Constructs – concepts that represent non-observable behaviors or events |
FCR | quality | 9. patient preference |
FCR | study design | 9. Secondary analysis – exploring new relationships in old data |
MUSC | data | accrual rate |
MUSC | role | active control |
MUSC | adherence | |
MUSC | unscheduled | adjustment |
MUSC | unscheduled | adverse event |
MUSC | data | allocation ratio |
MUSC | statistics | alternative hypothesis |
MUSC | data | analysis datasets |
MUSC | protocol | assessment |
MUSC | statistics | assessment bias |
MUSC | time | assessment schedule |
MUSC | as-treated | |
MUSC | protocol | auditing |
MUSC | study design | balanced design |
MUSC | baseline | |
MUSC | baseline comparability | |
MUSC | statistics | bias |
MUSC | protocol | biased coin randomizaiton |
MUSC | statistics | binormial |
MUSC | quality | bioequivalence |
MUSC | protocol | blinding |
MUSC | role | block |
MUSC | data | carryover effect |
MUSC | document | case report |
MUSC | document | case report form |
MUSC | study design | case-control design |
MUSC | protocol | censoring |
MUSC | data | clinical trial management system |
MUSC | protocol | cluster randomization |
MUSC | protocol | coding |
MUSC | role | cohort |
MUSC | study design | community intervention trial |
MUSC | quality | comparative treatment efficacy |
MUSC | quality | complaince |
MUSC | role | concurrent controls |
MUSC | statistics | confidence interval |
MUSC | study design | confirmatory trial |
MUSC | role | confounder |
MUSC | role | confounding factor |
MUSC | document | CONSORT statement |
MUSC | constrain | |
MUSC | context | |
MUSC | data | continous |
MUSC | role | controls |
MUSC | study design | crossover |
MUSC | study design | crossover trial |
MUSC | cross-sectional analysis | |
MUSC | organization role | data and safety monitoring board |
MUSC | document | data clarification query |
MUSC | document | data clarification request |
MUSC | time | data collection schedule |
MUSC | protocol | data management |
MUSC | protocol | data management plan |
MUSC | organization role | data safety monitoring committee |
MUSC | data | database |
MUSC | protocol | data-dependent stopping |
MUSC | data | derived data |
MUSC | deterministic | |
MUSC | study design | diagnostic trial |
MUSC | dichotomous | |
MUSC | data | discret |
MUSC | conclusion | dose finding |
MUSC | protocol | double blinding |
MUSC | protocol | double masking |
MUSC | unscheduled | dropouts |
MUSC | quality | drug lot |
MUSC | unscheduled | early termination |
MUSC | quality | efficacy |
MUSC | protocol | electronic data capture |
MUSC | protocol | eligibility |
MUSC | data | endpoint |
MUSC | quality | equipoise |
MUSC | study design | equivalence trials |
MUSC | protocol | estimate |
MUSC | protocol | evaluation |
MUSC | organization role | excecutive committee |
MUSC | protocol | exclusion criteria |
MUSC | expectation bias | |
MUSC | experiment | |
MUSC | study design | factorial design |
MUSC | protocol | follow-up |
MUSC | group sequential | |
MUSC | role | historic controls |
MUSC | statistics | imbalance |
MUSC | protocol | imputation of missing data |
MUSC | protocol | inclusion criteria |
MUSC | protocol | informed consent |
MUSC | organization role | institutional review board |
MUSC | protocol | intention to treat |
MUSC | role | intention to treat population |
MUSC | statistics | interaction |
MUSC | protocol | interim analysis |
MUSC | intersubject | |
MUSC | role | intervention |
MUSC | intrasubject | |
MUSC | document | investigational new drug (IND) application |
MUSC | quality | investigator competence |
MUSC | local control | |
MUSC | data | lost to follow-up |
MUSC | statistics | main effect |
MUSC | protocol | masking |
MUSC | person role | medical safety monitor |
MUSC | protocol | meta-analysis |
MUSC | protocol | minimization randomization |
MUSC | minority representation | |
MUSC | data | missing data |
MUSC | protocol | monitoring |
MUSC | study design | multi-center |
MUSC | study design | multi-site |
MUSC | statistics | multivariable |
MUSC | conclusion | negative findings |
MUSC | statistics | nesting design |
MUSC | document | new drug application (NDA) |
MUSC | statistics | Neyman allocation |
MUSC | unscheduled | nonadherence |
MUSC | unscheduled | noncomplaince |
MUSC | noninferiority | |
MUSC | statistics | null hypothesis |
MUSC | data | observation |
MUSC | statistics | odds |
MUSC | statistics | odds ratio |
MUSC | statistics | one-sided test |
MUSC | optimal allocation | |
MUSC | quality | over-the -count (OTC) |
MUSC | study design | parallel design |
MUSC | protocol | permuted block randomization |
MUSC | role | per-protocol population |
MUSC | study design | phase I trial |
MUSC | study design | phase II trial |
MUSC | study design | phase IIA |
MUSC | study design | phase IIB |
MUSC | study design | phase IIB |
MUSC | study design | phase III trial |
MUSC | study design | phase IV trial |
MUSC | study design | pivotal trials |
MUSC | study design | placebo controlled |
MUSC | protocol | play the winner |
MUSC | role | plecabo |
MUSC | aggregate | population |
MUSC | conclusion | positive findings |
MUSC | statistics | power |
MUSC | study design | prevention trials |
MUSC | primary efficacy | |
MUSC | conclusion | primary outcome |
MUSC | data | primary response |
MUSC | person role | principal investigator |
MUSC | role | prognostic factor |
MUSC | protocol | project management |
MUSC | protocol | project management plan |
MUSC | protocol | protocal complaince |
MUSC | protocol | protocol |
MUSC | unscheduled | protocol exception |
MUSC | unscheduled | protocol violation |
MUSC | statistics | pseudorandom |
MUSC | statistics | p-value |
MUSC | protocol | quality assurance |
MUSC | protocol | random play the winner |
MUSC | protocol | recruitment |
MUSC | protocol | regulatory management |
MUSC | data | repeat measurement |
MUSC | data | response |
MUSC | protocol | response adaptive randomization |
MUSC | study design | retrospective design |
MUSC | quality | safety |
MUSC | statistics | sample size |
MUSC | sample size inflation | |
MUSC | protocol | screening |
MUSC | selection bias | |
MUSC | study design | sequential design |
MUSC | unscheduled | serious adverse event |
MUSC | role | sham treatment |
MUSC | study design | single-center |
MUSC | study design | single-site |
MUSC | document | source document |
MUSC | person role | sponsor |
MUSC | protocol | statistical analysis plan |
MUSC | statistics | statistical significant |
MUSC | organization role | steering committee |
MUSC | protocol | stop rule |
MUSC | statistics | stratification |
MUSC | person role | study coordinator |
MUSC | role | subject |
MUSC | quality | superiority |
MUSC | conclusion | surrogate outcome |
MUSC | time | time to event |
MUSC | protocol | titration |
MUSC | quality | tocxicity |
MUSC | quality | tolerability |
MUSC | role | treatment |
MUSC | treatment allocation | |
MUSC | role | treatment group |
MUSC | unscheduled | treatment-emergenet adverse event (TEAE) |
MUSC | protocol | trilple blinding |
MUSC | protocol | triple masking |
MUSC | statistics | two-sided test |
MUSC | statistics | type I error |
MUSC | statistics | type II error |
MUSC | statistics | univariable |
MUSC | protocol | urn randomization |
MUSC | varibility | |
MUSC | time | washout period |
MUSC | protocol | withdrawal consent |
RCT | role | Analyzed population |
RCT | time | Anchored-time |
RCT | conclusion | Ancillary-outcome |
RCT | data | Baseline |
RCT | protocol | Blinding |
RCT | protocol | Blinding-method |
RCT | study design | Cointervention* |
RCT | study design | Comparison-arm |
RCT | quality | Cost |
RCT | role | Crossover population |
RCT | time | Date |
RCT | Device | |
RCT | time | Double-anchored-interval |
RCT | role | Drug |
RCT | protocol | Drug-step |
RCT | time | Duration |
RCT | role | Eligible-population |
RCT | role | Enrolled-population |
RCT | role | Excluded population |
RCT | protocol | Exclusion-rule |
RCT | protocol | Executed-protocol |
RCT | protocol | Executed-secondary-study-protocol |
RCT | study design | Experimental-arm |
RCT | protocol | Follow-up activity |
RCT | role | Funder |
RCT | protocol | Inclusion-rule |
RCT | organization | Institution |
RCT | protocol | Intended-protocol |
RCT | protocol | Intended-secondary-study-protocol |
RCT | time | Interval |
RCT | study design | Intervention* |
RCT | study design | Intervention-arm |
RCT | protocol | Intervention-step |
RCT | role | Investigator |
RCT | protocol | Non-drug-intervention-step |
RCT | No-treatment | |
RCT | data | Outcome |
RCT | data | Outcomes-followup |
RCT | role | Placebo |
RCT | conclusion | Primary-outcome |
RCT | protocol | Primary-recruitment-flowchart |
RCT | protocol | Procedure |
RCT | protocol | Protocol |
RCT | unscheduled | Protocol-change |
RCT | protocol | Protocol-concept |
RCT | role | Randomized-population |
RCT | Reason | |
RCT | role | Recruited-population |
RCT | protocol | Recruitment-flowchart |
RCT | role | Screened-population |
RCT | conclusion | Secondary-outcome |
RCT | study design | Secondary-study |
RCT | protocol | Secondary-study-protocol |
RCT | data | Side-effect |
RCT | time | Single-anchored-interval |
RCT | role | Site-enrollment |
RCT | protocol | Stopping-rule |
RCT | role | Study-arm population |
RCT | organization role | Study-committee |
RCT | conclusion | Study-outcome |
RCT | organization role | Study-site |
RCT | time | Timepoint |
RCT | time | Time-range |
RCT | role | Treatment-assignment |
RCT | Trial | |
RCT | role | Trial-participant |
RCT | data | Withdrawal-reason |
Some notes from Simona on the RCT terms as classified above File:CTO-may3-RCT.xls