December 18, 2020: The SAMSON Trial: An N-of-1 Trial of Statin, Placebo, and No Treatment to Assess Patient Symptoms (Matthew Shun-Shin, BMBCh, PhD)

Speaker

Matthew Shun-Shin, BMBCh, PhD
Imperial College London

Topic

The SAMSON Trial: An N-of-1 Trial of Statin, Placebo, and No Treatment to Assess Patient Symptoms

Keywords

Statins; SAMSON; N-of-1 study design; Side effects; Placebo; Nocebo effect

Key Points

  • Studies have shown that more than half of patients abandon statin medications completely within 2 years. Yet, placebo-controlled trials do not show excess withdrawals in the statin arm.
  • The SAMSON trial was a double-blind, three-group, N-of-1 trial in which participants were randomized to receive 12 one-month medication bottles in a computer-generated sequence. Four bottles contained statin tablets, 4 contained placebo tablets, and 4 were empty. The aim was to determine, for an individual participant, to what extent their symptoms were associated with the statin. Participants used a smartphone to rate the severity of their symptoms every day.
  • After 1 year, personalized study results were shared with each participant (n=60). Six months later, the study team evaluated whether participants were able to restart a statin.

Discussion Themes

The most important message from the SAMSON trial is that side effects from statin tablets are very real, but they are mainly caused by the act of taking the tablets, not the statin contained within them.

Because this N-of-1 design incorporated a period with no medication, participants could see as clearly as the study team the powerful magnitude of the “nocebo effect.” This resulted in half the participants successfully restarting statins.

Read more about the SAMSON trial in a letter from study investigators in the New England Journal of Medicine and an interview in Medscape.

Tags

#pctGR, @Collaboratory1

December 11, 2020: PREVENTABLE: Starting a Pragmatic Trial in a Pandemic (Karen Alexander, MD; Schuyler Jones, MD)

Speakers

Karen P. Alexander, MD
Professor of Medicine/Cardiology
Duke University School of Medicine

W. Schuyler Jones, MD
Associate Professor of Medicine/Cardiology
Duke University School of Medicine

Topic

PREVENTABLE: Starting a Pragmatic Trial in a Pandemic

Keywords

Heart disease; Dementia; Cholesterol; Statins; Pragmatic trial; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institute on Aging; Mild cognitive impairment

Key Points

  • More than half of older adults (age 75+) in the United States have cognitive impairment or frailty or both.
  • PREVENTABLE is one of the largest research studies in older adults. The purpose is to learn if taking a statin could help older adults live well for longer by preventing dementia, functional decline, or heart disease.
  • The study medication (statin) is mailed directly to participants’ homes. Study sites are part of the research infrastructure within PCORnet and Veterans Affairs (VA).
  • Pragmatic aspects of the trial include the study question: Do statins work in practice for outcomes that matter most to older adults? Also, enrollment is telehealth-enabled, and consent is electronic (e-Consent).

Discussion Themes

How did the study team work with IT to make the EHR system changes (eg, tools and workflow) needed to conduct the research?

Are older participants able to interact well with the technology used in the trial?

Are there special considerations embedded within the study to encourage the retention of study participants?

Read more about the PREVENTABLE study.

Tags

#pctGR, @Collaboratory1