The Trial within Cohorts (TwiCs) study design in oncology: Experience and methodological reflections
Rob Kessels, Anne M. May, Miriam Koopman, Kit C.B. Roes

TL;DR
The paper discusses the TwiCs study design in oncology, highlighting its advantages over traditional RCTs and reflecting on key methodological challenges such as timing of randomization and handling non-compliance.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the TwiCs design, emphasizing methodological considerations and sharing experiences from oncology studies to guide future research.
Findings
TwiCs design can improve patient recruitment in oncology trials.
Methodological challenges include timing of randomization and managing refusals.
Clarifies the definition of intention-to-treat in TwiCs studies.
Abstract
A Trial within Cohorts (TwiCs) study design is a trial design that uses the infrastructure of an observational cohort study to initiate a randomized trial. Upon cohort enrollment, cohort participants provided consent for being randomized in future studies without being informed. Once a new treatment is available, eligible cohort participants are randomly assigned to this new treatment or standard of care. Patients randomized to the treatment arm are offered this new treatment, which they can refuse. Patients who refuse will receive standard of care instead. Patients randomized to the standard of care arm, receive no information about the trial and continue receiving standard of care as part the cohort study. Standard cohort measures are used for outcome comparisons. The TwiCs study design aims to overcome some issues encountered in standard Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs). An…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics in Clinical Research · Advanced Causal Inference Techniques · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
