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Conduct and Implementation of Personalized Trials in Research and Practice

Abstract

The mainstay of evidence development in medicine is the parallel-group randomized controlled trial (RCT), which generates estimates of treatment efficacy or effectiveness for the average person in the trial. In contrast, personalized trials (sometimes referred to as 'single-person trials' or 'N-of-1 trials') assess the comparative effectiveness of two or more treatments in a single individual. These single-subject, randomized crossover trials have been used in a scattershot fashion in medicine for over 40 years but have not been widely adopted. An important barrier is the paucity of strong evidence that personalized trials improve outcomes. However, the principal impediment may have less to do with proof of efficacy than with practical aspects of design and implementation. These include decisions about treatment regimen flexibility, blinding, and washout periods as well as organizational, clinician, and patient-level challenges. After reviewing the essential elements of personalized trials, this article addresses these speed bumps and fundamentally asks, 'Why have personalized trials not been more widely adopted, and how can they be made more readily deployable and useful?' The article concludes by suggesting ways in which emerging technologies and approaches promise to overcome existing barriers and open promising vistas for the next generation of personalized-trial researchers and practitioners.

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