Clinical therapeutic trials

AbstractThe term clinical trial implies an investigation of a therapeutic intervention in the pursuit of evidence of benefit, short or sustained, and observations on the possibility of toxicity related to the therapeutic intervention. It is possible that the first clinical trial took place in the court of the Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar circa 600 BC, as recorded in Chapter 1 of the Book of Daniel, verse 3-20. However, it is in the last 500  years that there has been good written documentation at attempts to interpret therapeutic benefit from the use of treatments. Lind’s demonstration on the usefulness of oranges and lemons in the treatment of scurvy in 1747, and the unethical experiment by Edward Jenner (1749–1823) on the inocul ation in 1796, of an 8-year-old boy, with cow pox obtained from a milk maid, followed by an attempt to give the young boy smallpox by direct inoculation 18 days later, are striking examples of clinical trials. Human ethics, strict clinical observations, statistics, the governed scientific purity of therapeutic agents, and safety testing of therapeutics, devices, and physical interventions, have created the basis for the modern clinical trial.
Source: Inflammopharmacology - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research