Yi Liu, Miao Yang, Siyoen Kil, Jiangya Li, Shoubhik Mondal, Y. Shentu, Hong Tian, Liwei Wang, Godwin Yung
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Instead of trying to circumvent this issue by discouraging comparisons between marginal and conditional HRs, we propose to directly fix it by using alternative logic-respecting efficacy estimands such as ratio of medians, ratio and difference of restricted mean survival times and milestone probabilities. These measures are straightforward, easy to interpret and clinically meaningful. More importantly, they will guarantee agreement between marginal and conditional efficacy and provide cohesive message around efficacy profile of the drug in the presence of subgroups. A step further is the application of Subgroup Mixable Estimation (SME) principle to ensure logical estimates when analyzing real clinical trial data. Detailed guidance is provided for the aforementioned logic-respecting estimands using either parametric, semiparametric or nonparametric approaches. 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Differentiating prognostic versus predictive biomarkers impacts important decision makings for patients and treating physicians. Using Hazard Ratio (HR) can mistake a purely prognostic biomarker for a predictive one leading to a disheartening possibility of depriving patients of beneficial treatment as demonstrated in the OAK trial. This stems from the illogical issue of HR at population level where marginal HR in the overall population can be larger than those in both subgroups. Instead of trying to circumvent this issue by discouraging comparisons between marginal and conditional HRs, we propose to directly fix it by using alternative logic-respecting efficacy estimands such as ratio of medians, ratio and difference of restricted mean survival times and milestone probabilities. These measures are straightforward, easy to interpret and clinically meaningful. 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From Logic-Respecting Efficacy Estimands to Logic-Ensuring Analysis Principle for Time-to-Event Endpoint in Randomized Clinical Trials with Subgroups
Abstract An important goal of precision medicine is to identify biomarkers that are predictive, and tailor the treatment according to the biomarker levels of individual patients. Differentiating prognostic versus predictive biomarkers impacts important decision makings for patients and treating physicians. Using Hazard Ratio (HR) can mistake a purely prognostic biomarker for a predictive one leading to a disheartening possibility of depriving patients of beneficial treatment as demonstrated in the OAK trial. This stems from the illogical issue of HR at population level where marginal HR in the overall population can be larger than those in both subgroups. Instead of trying to circumvent this issue by discouraging comparisons between marginal and conditional HRs, we propose to directly fix it by using alternative logic-respecting efficacy estimands such as ratio of medians, ratio and difference of restricted mean survival times and milestone probabilities. These measures are straightforward, easy to interpret and clinically meaningful. More importantly, they will guarantee agreement between marginal and conditional efficacy and provide cohesive message around efficacy profile of the drug in the presence of subgroups. A step further is the application of Subgroup Mixable Estimation (SME) principle to ensure logical estimates when analyzing real clinical trial data. Detailed guidance is provided for the aforementioned logic-respecting estimands using either parametric, semiparametric or nonparametric approaches. Simultaneous inference can be provided with proper multiplicity adjustment to facilitate joint decision making with user-friendly apps.
期刊介绍:
Statistics in Biopharmaceutical Research ( SBR), publishes articles that focus on the needs of researchers and applied statisticians in biopharmaceutical industries; academic biostatisticians from schools of medicine, veterinary medicine, public health, and pharmacy; statisticians and quantitative analysts working in regulatory agencies (e.g., U.S. Food and Drug Administration and its counterpart in other countries); statisticians with an interest in adopting methodology presented in this journal to their own fields; and nonstatisticians with an interest in applying statistical methods to biopharmaceutical problems.
Statistics in Biopharmaceutical Research accepts papers that discuss appropriate statistical methodology and information regarding the use of statistics in all phases of research, development, and practice in the pharmaceutical, biopharmaceutical, device, and diagnostics industries. Articles should focus on the development of novel statistical methods, novel applications of current methods, or the innovative application of statistical principles that can be used by statistical practitioners in these disciplines. Areas of application may include statistical methods for drug discovery, including papers that address issues of multiplicity, sequential trials, adaptive designs, etc.; preclinical and clinical studies; genomics and proteomics; bioassay; biomarkers and surrogate markers; models and analyses of drug history, including pharmacoeconomics, product life cycle, detection of adverse events in clinical studies, and postmarketing risk assessment; regulatory guidelines, including issues of standardization of terminology (e.g., CDISC), tolerance and specification limits related to pharmaceutical practice, and novel methods of drug approval; and detection of adverse events in clinical and toxicological studies. Tutorial articles also are welcome. Articles should include demonstrable evidence of the usefulness of this methodology (presumably by means of an application).
The Editorial Board of SBR intends to ensure that the journal continually provides important, useful, and timely information. To accomplish this, the board strives to attract outstanding articles by seeing that each submission receives a careful, thorough, and prompt review.
Authors can choose to publish gold open access in this journal.