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Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance

BACKGROUND: Premature discontinuation and other forms of noncompliance with treatment assignment can complicate causal inference of treatment effects in randomized trials. The intent-to-treat analysis gives unbiased estimates for causal effects of treatment assignment on outcome, but may understate...

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Autores principales: Wang, Yiting, Berlin, Jesse A, Pinheiro, José, Wilcox, Marsha A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4420771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25733675
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1740774515572352
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author Wang, Yiting
Berlin, Jesse A
Pinheiro, José
Wilcox, Marsha A
author_facet Wang, Yiting
Berlin, Jesse A
Pinheiro, José
Wilcox, Marsha A
author_sort Wang, Yiting
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Premature discontinuation and other forms of noncompliance with treatment assignment can complicate causal inference of treatment effects in randomized trials. The intent-to-treat analysis gives unbiased estimates for causal effects of treatment assignment on outcome, but may understate potential benefit or harm of actual treatment. The corresponding upper confidence limit can also be underestimated. PURPOSE: To compare estimates of the hazard ratio and upper bound of the two-sided 95% confidence interval from causal inference methods that account for noncompliance with those from the intent-to-treat analysis. METHODS: We used simulations with parameters chosen to reflect cardiovascular safety trials of diabetes drugs, with a focus on upper bound estimates relative to 1.3, based on regulatory guidelines. A total of 1000 simulations were run under each parameter combination for a hypothetical trial of 10,000 total subjects randomly assigned to active treatment or control at 1:1 ratio. Noncompliance was considered in the form of treatment discontinuation and cross-over at specified proportions, with an assumed true hazard ratio of 0.9, 1, and 1.3, respectively. Various levels of risk associated with being a non-complier (independent of treatment status) were evaluated. Hazard ratio and upper bound estimates from causal survival analysis and intent-to-treat were obtained from each simulation and summarized under each parameter setting. RESULTS: Causal analysis estimated the true hazard ratio with little bias in almost all settings examined. Intent-to-treat was unbiased only when the true hazard ratio = 1; otherwise it underestimated both benefit and harm. When upper bound estimates from intent-to-treat were ≥1.3, corresponding estimates from causal analysis were also ≥1.3 in almost 100% of the simulations, regardless of the true hazard ratio. When upper bound estimates from intent-to-treat were <1.3 and the true hazard ratio = 1, corresponding upper bound estimates from causal analysis were ≥1.3 in up to 66% of the simulations under some settings. LIMITATIONS: Simulations cannot cover all scenarios for noncompliance in real randomized trials. CONCLUSION: Causal survival analysis was superior to intent-to-treat in estimating the true hazard ratio with respect to bias in the presence of noncompliance. However, its large variance should be considered for safety upper bound exclusion especially when the true hazard ratio = 1. Our simulations provided a broad reference for practical considerations of bias–variance trade-off in dealing with noncompliance in cardiovascular safety trials of diabetes drugs. Further research is warranted for the development and application of causal inference methods in the evaluation of safety upper bounds.
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spelling pubmed-44207712015-05-31 Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance Wang, Yiting Berlin, Jesse A Pinheiro, José Wilcox, Marsha A Clin Trials Articles BACKGROUND: Premature discontinuation and other forms of noncompliance with treatment assignment can complicate causal inference of treatment effects in randomized trials. The intent-to-treat analysis gives unbiased estimates for causal effects of treatment assignment on outcome, but may understate potential benefit or harm of actual treatment. The corresponding upper confidence limit can also be underestimated. PURPOSE: To compare estimates of the hazard ratio and upper bound of the two-sided 95% confidence interval from causal inference methods that account for noncompliance with those from the intent-to-treat analysis. METHODS: We used simulations with parameters chosen to reflect cardiovascular safety trials of diabetes drugs, with a focus on upper bound estimates relative to 1.3, based on regulatory guidelines. A total of 1000 simulations were run under each parameter combination for a hypothetical trial of 10,000 total subjects randomly assigned to active treatment or control at 1:1 ratio. Noncompliance was considered in the form of treatment discontinuation and cross-over at specified proportions, with an assumed true hazard ratio of 0.9, 1, and 1.3, respectively. Various levels of risk associated with being a non-complier (independent of treatment status) were evaluated. Hazard ratio and upper bound estimates from causal survival analysis and intent-to-treat were obtained from each simulation and summarized under each parameter setting. RESULTS: Causal analysis estimated the true hazard ratio with little bias in almost all settings examined. Intent-to-treat was unbiased only when the true hazard ratio = 1; otherwise it underestimated both benefit and harm. When upper bound estimates from intent-to-treat were ≥1.3, corresponding estimates from causal analysis were also ≥1.3 in almost 100% of the simulations, regardless of the true hazard ratio. When upper bound estimates from intent-to-treat were <1.3 and the true hazard ratio = 1, corresponding upper bound estimates from causal analysis were ≥1.3 in up to 66% of the simulations under some settings. LIMITATIONS: Simulations cannot cover all scenarios for noncompliance in real randomized trials. CONCLUSION: Causal survival analysis was superior to intent-to-treat in estimating the true hazard ratio with respect to bias in the presence of noncompliance. However, its large variance should be considered for safety upper bound exclusion especially when the true hazard ratio = 1. Our simulations provided a broad reference for practical considerations of bias–variance trade-off in dealing with noncompliance in cardiovascular safety trials of diabetes drugs. Further research is warranted for the development and application of causal inference methods in the evaluation of safety upper bounds. SAGE Publications 2015-03-01 2015-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4420771/ /pubmed/25733675 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1740774515572352 Text en © The Author(s) 2015 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (http://www.uk.sagepub.com/aboutus/openaccess.htm).
spellingShingle Articles
Wang, Yiting
Berlin, Jesse A
Pinheiro, José
Wilcox, Marsha A
Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance
title Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance
title_full Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance
title_fullStr Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance
title_full_unstemmed Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance
title_short Causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance
title_sort causal inference methods to assess safety upper bounds in randomized trials with noncompliance
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4420771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25733675
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1740774515572352
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