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British Journal of Cancer logoLink to British Journal of Cancer
. 1982 Sep;46(3):368–375. doi: 10.1038/bjc.1982.212

Practical experience of randomization in cancer trials: an international survey.

S J Pocock, S W Lagakos
PMCID: PMC2011110  PMID: 7126426

Abstract

The results from an international survey of 15 major cancer centres have clarified how randomization is being implemented in cancer trials. As regards the mechanics of obtaining treatment assignment for each patient a system of telephone registration to a central randomization office was widely used. We also advise formal checks for patient eligibility immediately before treatment assignment, and subsequent written confirmation of randomization to the investigators. As regards statistical methods, stratification of randomization by one or two prognostic factors (and institution in multicentre trials) is commonplace. Most centres used the standard approach of random permuted blocks within strata though some others used "dynamic" institution-balancing or "minimization" methods instead. The value of stratified allocation is chiefly for the trial's credibility in having comparable treatment groups, rather than for statistical efficiency. One should avoid overstratification and use only the really important prognostic factors. One essential is that randomization should in practice work for every patient, so undue complexity is to be avoided.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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