Experimental studies
Experimental studies, also called randomized, controlled trials, or RCTs, assign groups of people at random, like the toss of a coin, to either receive (or not receive) a preventive or therapeutic intervention or screening test, such as a drug, device or procedure. Researchers then assess the impact of the intervention on those who received it as compared to those who did not.
Well-known examples of RCTs include those conducted by the Women’s Health Initiative, a massive nationwide undertaking coordinated by Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. Launched in 1991 with a $625 million grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the WHI conducted four randomized, controlled Phase 3 trials (see below re: trial phases) that were designed to measure the effects of various interventions, from hormone therapy to dietary supplements to a low-fat diet, on preventing the most common health issues in postmenopausal women, including heart disease, breast and colorectal cancer, and osteoporosis-related fractures. The initiative, which enrolled more than 161,000 older women across the U.S., had — and continues to have — a wide-ranging impact on medical practice and women’s health.
RCTs are designed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of experimental drugs or tests for diseases such as cancer. They are conducted incrementally, in a series of steps that are called phases. Below are brief descriptions of the study phases.