Prepared by Dr. Alper DUNKI
Spot Knowledge – Clinical Research & Statistical Tests
Presentation of Findings in Clinical Research, Statistical Concepts, and Tests
Basic Concepts
In clinical research, risk, effect, and outcomes are quantified using various statistical methods. Absolute risk increase indicates a harmful effect, whereas absolute risk reduction reflects a beneficial intervention. Bayesian analysis begins with a prior probability and updates it with new data.
Blinding is employed to reduce bias. Outcomes may be dichotomous (e.g., presence/absence of disease) or continuous variables (e.g., blood pressure value). Effect size expresses the difference between two groups using standardized measures.
Statistical Methods
The p-value represents the probability that the observed result occurred by chance. However, it does not, on its own, indicate clinical relevance. Confidence intervals reflect the precision of an estimate. Odds ratio, risk ratio, and hazard ratio measure differences in probabilities or time-related risks between groups.
Meta-analyses and systematic reviews increase the strength of evidence by pooling data from multiple studies. A forest plot provides a visual summary of individual study results and overall effect.
Presentation of Findings
Distinguishing between statistical significance and clinical significance is essential. A statistically significant difference may not always be clinically meaningful. Tables and figures facilitate transparent reporting of findings. CONSORT guidelines ensure standardized reporting of randomized controlled trials.
Statistical Tests and Applications
Clinical Decision-Making
Interpretation of evidence should consider not only statistical outcomes but also patient benefit, adverse effects, and feasibility. Clinical research findings must be integrated with individual patient characteristics and physician expertise.
References
1. Rovetta A. P-values and confidence intervals as compatibility measures. J Transl Med. 2025 doi:10.1186/s12967-025-?
2. Phillips MR, Wykoff CC, Thabane L, Bhandari M, Chaudhary V. The clinician’s guide to p values, confidence intervals, and magnitude of effects. Eye (Lond). 2022;36:341–342. doi:10.1038/s41433-021-01863-w
3. van Zwet E, Tong TJK. A new look at P values for randomized clinical trials. NEJM Evid. 2023;2(6):? (sayfa no). doi:10.1056/EVIDoa2300003