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In this type of document, diagrams are drawn using "blocks" corresponding to trial elements rather than horizontal lines. Trial elements are the various time periods of the trial and we want to emphasize the separate trial elements might otherwise be "hidden" in a single horizontal line. See the Section on Section 3.3.1.1.3, Trial Elements (TE), for more information about defining trial elements. In general, the elements of a trial will be fairly clear. However, in the process of working out a trial design, alternative definitions of trial elements may be considered, in which case diagrams for each alternative may be constructed.
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As illustrated in the study schema diagram for Example Trial 1, this simple parallel trial has 3 arms, corresponding to the 3 possible left-to-right "paths" through the trial. Each path corresponds to 1 of the 3 elements at the right end of the diagram. Randomization is represented by the 3 red arrows leading from the Run-in block.
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Study Schema |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Study Schema |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Study Schema |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Study Schema |
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The next diagram for this trial shows the 4 epochs of the trial, indicates the 3 arms, and shows the sequence of elements for each group of subjects in each epoch. The arrows are at the right side of the diagram because it is at the end of the trial that all the separate paths through the trial can be seen. Note that, in this diagram, randomization—which was shown using 3 red arrows connecting the Run-in block with the 3 treatment product exposure blocks in the first diagram—is indicated by a note with an arrow pointing to the line between 2 epochs.
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Prospective View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Prospective View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Prospective View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Prospective View |
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The next diagram can be thought of as the retrospective view of a trial, the view back from a point in time when a subject’s assignment to an arm is known. In this view, the trial appears as a grid, with an arm represented by a series of study cells, one for each epoch, and a sequence of elements within each study cell. In this example (as in many trials), there is exactly 1 element in each study cell. In more complicated designs this is not always the case.
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Retrospective View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Retrospective View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Retrospective View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Parallel Design Retrospective View |
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The next diagram shows the trial from the viewpoint of blinded participants. To blinded participants in this trial, all arms look alike. They know when a subject is in the screen element or the run-in element, but when a subject is in the treatment product exposure epoch, participants know only that the subject is receiving a study product, not which study product, and therefore not which element.
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| Example Trial Study 1, Blinded View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Blinded View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Blinded View |
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| Example Trial Study 1, Blinded View |
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A trial design matrix is a table with a row for each arm in the trial and a column for each epoch in the trial. It is closely related to the retrospective view of the trial, and many users may find it easier to construct a table than to draw a diagram. The cells in the matrix represent the study cells, which are populated with trial elements. In this trial, each study cell contains exactly 1 element.
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