Stuart Pocock is Professor of Medical Statistics (since 1989) at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, a leading European centre of excellence for biostatistical research and teaching.
His primary research interest concerns clinical trials, both as regards methodological developments and applied collaboration in major trials, mainly in cardiology. He also has interests in observational epidemiology especially pharmaco-epidemiology. His particular methodological areas of expertise include: standards for the statistical reporting of trials and epidemiological studies, the statistical ethical and organisational principles for data monitoring including early stopping guidelines, the win ratio approach to a hierarchical composite of outcomes with clinical priorities, adaptive designs, handling non-proportional hazards, the value of repeat-event analyses, use and misuse of propensity scores, the pros and cons of non-inferiority trials, problems of multiplicity in trial reporting, eg, subgroup analyses, multiple outcomes and covariate adjustment, and the development/validation of prognostic risk scores.
Professor Pocock and his colleagues run a statistical centre for the design, conduct, analysis and reporting of major clinical trials, especially in cardiovascular diseases. He is also a consultant statistician for a wider range of clinical trials in which expert statistical advice is needed, and serves as a statistical member of many trial data monitoring and steering committees.
He collaborates internationally especially with the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares in Madrid, and the Cardiovascular Research Foundation and Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. He is a frequent lecturer on a variety of clinical trials issues, and has published over 600 articles in peer-reviewed journals, and a popular textbook 鈥淐linical Trials: a Practical Approach鈥.
His primary research interest concerns clinical trials, both as regards methodological developments and applied collaboration in major trials, mainly in cardiology. He also has interests in observational epidemiology especially pharmaco-epidemiology. His particular methodological areas of expertise include: standards for the statistical reporting of trials and epidemiological studies, the statistical ethical and organisational principles for data monitoring including early stopping guidelines, the win ratio approach to a hierarchical composite of outcomes with clinical priorities, adaptive designs, handling non-proportional hazards, the value of repeat-event analyses, use and misuse of propensity scores, the pros and cons of non-inferiority trials, problems of multiplicity in trial reporting, eg, subgroup analyses, multiple outcomes and covariate adjustment, and the development/validation of prognostic risk scores.
Professor Pocock and his colleagues run a statistical centre for the design, conduct, analysis and reporting of major clinical trials, especially in cardiovascular diseases. He is also a consultant statistician for a wider range of clinical trials in which expert statistical advice is needed, and serves as a statistical member of many trial data monitoring and steering committees.
He collaborates internationally especially with the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares in Madrid, and the Cardiovascular Research Foundation and Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. He is a frequent lecturer on a variety of clinical trials issues, and has published over 600 articles in peer-reviewed journals, and a popular textbook 鈥淐linical Trials: a Practical Approach鈥.
Affiliations
Department of Medical Statistics
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health
Centres
Centre for Data and Statistical Science for Health
Teaching
Module in Clinical Trials every Autumn
Other MSc Medical Statistics activities
PhD student supervision
Mentor to Cardiology Fellows in Madrid
Lecturing to Cardiology Fellows in Mt Sinai, NY
Other MSc Medical Statistics activities
PhD student supervision
Mentor to Cardiology Fellows in Madrid
Lecturing to Cardiology Fellows in Mt Sinai, NY
Research
His primary research interest concerns clinical trials, both as regards methodological developments and applied collaboration in major trials, mainly in cardiology. He also has interests in observational epidemiology especially pharmaco-epidemiology. His particular methodological areas of expertise include: standards for the statistical reporting of trials and epidemiological studies, the statistical ethical and organisational principles for data monitoring including early stopping guidelines, the win ratio approach to a hierarchical composite of outcomes with clinical priorities, adaptive designs, handling non-proportional hazards, the value of repeat-event analyses, use and misuse of propensity scores, the pros and cons of non-inferiority trials, problems of multiplicity in trial reporting, eg, subgroup analyses, multiple outcomes and covariate adjustment, and the development/validation of prognostic risk scores.
Selected Publications
2022
New England Journal of Medicine
2022
Lancet (London, England)
2021
The New England journal of medicine
2021
European heart journal
2021
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
2020
European heart journal
2024
JACC. Heart failure
2024
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
2024
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
2024
Journal of the American College of Cardiology