PHSI-BRG
PHSI-BRG
Home
Staff
Sarah Al Ashmori
Andy Bryant
Thomas Chadwick
Svetlana Cherlin
Mike Cole
Holly Fisher
Tony Fouweather
Shaun Hiu
Dorcas Kareithi
Ann Breeze Konkoth
Nan Lin
Jingky Lozano-Kuehne
Helen Mossop
Ellen Moss
Aritra Mukherjee
Jérémie Nsengimana
Vicky Ryan
Marzieh Shahmandi
Moha Shojaei
Dawn Teare
James Wason
Faye Williamson
Nina Wilson
Sylvia Zhang
PhD students
Ruqayya Azher
Nicole Cizauskas
Laura Etfer
Niamh Fitzgerald
Raiann Hamshaw
Pela Okorie
Samuel Sarkodie
Lou Whitehead
Methodology research
Overview
Adaptive designs
Master protocols
Transforming IMID trials
Projects
Publications
News
Courses
Adaptive Designs and Multiple Testing Procedures
Leveraging External Information
Precision Medicine Clinical Trials
Contact
Light
Dark
Automatic
2
Clinical effectiveness of septoplasty versus medical management for nasal airways obstruction: multicentre, open label, randomised controlled trial
Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency’s “Consultation on proposals for legislative changes for clinical trials”: a response from the Trials Methodology Research Partnership Adaptive Designs Working Group, with a focus on data sharing
Role of gender in explaining metabolic syndrome risk factors in an Iranian rural population using structural equation modelling
The impact of the Speech Systems Approach on intelligibility for children with cerebral palsy: a secondary analysis
A Comparison of Randomization Methods for Multi-Arm Clinical Trials
Dual bronchodilators in Bronchiectasis study (DIBS): protocol for a pragmatic, multicentre, placebo-controlled, three-arm, double-blinded, randomised controlled trial studying bronchodilators in preventing exacerbations of bronchiectasis
GABA Regulates Electrical Activity and Tumor Initiation in Melanoma
The potential of innovative trial design for efficiently evaluating repurposed drugs
Conservative management versus tonsillectomy in adults with recurrent acute tonsillitis in the UK (NATTINA): a multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled trial
Current practices in studies applying the target trial emulation framework: a protocol for a systematic review
«
»
Cite
×