Clinical Trial
Clinical trial research involves the study of novel therapies in patients with the
goal of identifying the best possible treatment. Our faculty are deeply involved in
the design, conduct, and analysis of single and multi-center clinical trials in cancer,
heart disease, diabetes, hepatitis, and pulmonary fibrosis as well as trials in sleep
disorders, women's and neonatal health and in the treatment of drug abuse. Our proximity
to the excellent U-M Medical School and Comprehensive Cancer Center enables high-quality
learning experiences for graduate students interested in clinical research. Our faculty
and students are developing statistical methodologies that identify promising therapies
more quickly and less expensively. Other research interests include: reducing or eliminating
bias due to informative censoring, gaining information from auxiliary variables, incorporating
information about quality of life, group sequential monitoring of trials in non-standard
situations, flexibly accounting for measurement error in assessing treatment effects,
validating use of surrogate endpoints, conducting crossover trials subject to censoring
and determining the maximum tolerated dose while considering both toxicity and efficacy
outcomes.
Faculty: P. Bonstra, T. Braun, M. Elliott, N. Henderson, N. Kaciroti, K. Kidwell, R. Ladhania, R. Little, C. Spino, J. Taylor, Z. Wu, L. Zhao, M. Zhang
Links: U-M Medical Center, Rogel Cancer Center, U-M Center for the Advancement of Clinical Research, Kidney Epidemiology & Cost Center, SABER (Statistical Analysis of Biomedical and Educational Research), MCDTR Methods and Measurement Core