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An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials

BACKGROUND: Phase III superiority clinical trials have negative results (new treatment is not statistically better than standard of care) due to a number of factors, including patient and disease heterogeneity. However, even a treatment regime that fails to show population-level clinical improvement...

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Autor principal: Dyson, Greg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8496893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34632463
http://dx.doi.org/10.23937/2469-5831/1510038
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author Dyson, Greg
author_facet Dyson, Greg
author_sort Dyson, Greg
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Phase III superiority clinical trials have negative results (new treatment is not statistically better than standard of care) due to a number of factors, including patient and disease heterogeneity. However, even a treatment regime that fails to show population-level clinical improvement will have a subgroup of patients that attain a measurable clinical benefit. OBJECTIVE: The goal of this paper is to modify the Patient Rule-Induction Method to identify statistically significant subgroups, defined by clinical and/or demographic factors, of the clinical trial population where the experimental treatment performs better than the standard of care and better than observed in the entire clinical trial sample. RESULTS: We illustrate this method using part A of the SUCCESS clinical trial, which showed no overall difference between treatment arms: HR (95% CI) = 0.97 (0.78, 1.20). Using PRIM, we identified one subgroup defined by the mutational profile in BRCA1 which resulted in a significant benefit for adding Gemcitabine to the standard treatment: HR (95% CI) = 0.59 (0.40, 0.87). CONCLUSION: This result demonstrates that useful information can be extracted from existing databases that could provide insight into why a phase III trial failed and assist in the design of future clinical trials involving the experimental treatment.
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spelling pubmed-84968932021-10-07 An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials Dyson, Greg Int J Clin Biostat Biom Article BACKGROUND: Phase III superiority clinical trials have negative results (new treatment is not statistically better than standard of care) due to a number of factors, including patient and disease heterogeneity. However, even a treatment regime that fails to show population-level clinical improvement will have a subgroup of patients that attain a measurable clinical benefit. OBJECTIVE: The goal of this paper is to modify the Patient Rule-Induction Method to identify statistically significant subgroups, defined by clinical and/or demographic factors, of the clinical trial population where the experimental treatment performs better than the standard of care and better than observed in the entire clinical trial sample. RESULTS: We illustrate this method using part A of the SUCCESS clinical trial, which showed no overall difference between treatment arms: HR (95% CI) = 0.97 (0.78, 1.20). Using PRIM, we identified one subgroup defined by the mutational profile in BRCA1 which resulted in a significant benefit for adding Gemcitabine to the standard treatment: HR (95% CI) = 0.59 (0.40, 0.87). CONCLUSION: This result demonstrates that useful information can be extracted from existing databases that could provide insight into why a phase III trial failed and assist in the design of future clinical trials involving the experimental treatment. 2021-06-28 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8496893/ /pubmed/34632463 http://dx.doi.org/10.23937/2469-5831/1510038 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Dyson, Greg
An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials
title An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials
title_full An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials
title_fullStr An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials
title_full_unstemmed An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials
title_short An Application of the Patient Rule-Induction Method to Detect Clinically Meaningful Subgroups from Failed Phase III Clinical Trials
title_sort application of the patient rule-induction method to detect clinically meaningful subgroups from failed phase iii clinical trials
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8496893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34632463
http://dx.doi.org/10.23937/2469-5831/1510038
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