Background: The majority of patients diagnosed with glioblastoma are >60 years. Three randomized trials addressed the roles of radiotherapy (RT) and temozolomide (TMZ) for elderly patients. NORDIC and NOA-08 compared RT versus TMZ, while CE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The assessment of benefits and harms from experimental treatments often ignores the association between outcomes. In a randomized trial, generalized pairwise comparisons (GPC) can be used to assess a Net Benefit that takes this association into account.
Study Design And Settings: We use GPC to analyze a fictitious trial of treatment versus control, with a binary efficacy outcome (response) and a binary toxicity outcome, as well as data from two actual randomized trials in oncology.
In survival analysis with competing risks, the treatment effect is typically expressed using cause-specific or subdistribution hazard ratios, both relying on proportional hazards assumptions. This paper proposes a nonparametric approach to analyze competing risks data based on generalized pairwise comparisons (GPC). GPC estimate the net benefit, defined as the probability that a patient from the treatment group has a better outcome than a patient from the control group minus the probability of the opposite situation, by comparing all pairs of patients taking one patient from each group.
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