Clinical Trial No-Intervention Arm
(Redirected from No intervention arm)
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A Clinical Trial No-Intervention Arm is a Clinical Trial Arm in which clinical trial participants don't receive any medical intervention/treatment.
- Example(s):
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Single-Arm Clinical Trial, Multi-Arm Clinical Trial, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial, Exploratory Clinical Trial, Confirmatory Clinical Trial, Parallel Clinical Trial, Crossover Clinical Trial.
References
2022a
- (ClinicalTrials.gov, 2022) ⇒ https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/about-studies/glossary Retrieved:2022-01-22.
- QUOTE: No intervention arm: An arm type in which a group of participants does not receive any intervention/treatment during the clinical trial.
2022b
- (FOCR, 2022) ⇒ https://friendsofcancerresearch.org/randomized-and-single-arm-trials Retrieved:2022-01-22.
- QUOTE: An arm of a clinical trial is a group of patients receiving a specific treatment (or no treatment). Trials involving several arms, or randomized trials, treat randomly-selected groups of patients with different therapies in order to compare their medical outcomes. Experimental arms, which receive an experimental drug, are compared with control arms, which can receive an active comparator (another therapy used to treat the same condition as the experimental therapy), a placebo comparator (an inactive therapy), a sham comparator (an inactive therapy made to look identical to the active therapy), or no intervention. Some clinical trial designs, such as the lung cancer master protocol design, allow for several experimental drugs to be tested simultaneously.