AI Article Synopsis

  • In phase III clinical trials, adverse events can serve as crucial safety measures, especially for life-threatening conditions, but are often overlooked in efficacy analyses.
  • Statistical monitoring of safety occurs more frequently than for efficacy, leading to potential impacts on error probabilities if safety is not considered in the trial's design.
  • Findings indicate that while type I error rates for efficacy decrease with higher safety correlations, power for efficacy is significantly reduced when there are larger differences in safety event rates between groups.

Article Abstract

In phase III clinical trials, some adverse events may not be rare or unexpected and can be considered as a primary measure for safety, particularly in trials of life-threatening conditions, such as stroke or traumatic brain injury. In some clinical areas, efficacy endpoints may be highly correlated with safety endpoints, yet the interim efficacy analyses under group sequential designs usually do not consider safety measures formally in the analyses. Furthermore, safety is often statistically monitored more frequently than efficacy measures. Because early termination of a trial in this situation can be triggered by either efficacy or safety, the impact of safety monitoring on the error probabilities of efficacy analyses may be nontrivial if the original design does not take the multiplicity effect into account. We estimate the actual error probabilities for a bivariate binary efficacy-safety response in large confirmatory group sequential trials. The estimated probabilities are verified by Monte Carlo simulation. Our findings suggest that type I error for efficacy analyses decreases as efficacy-safety correlation or between-group difference in the safety event rate increases. In addition, although power for efficacy is robust to misspecification of the efficacy-safety correlation, it decreases dramatically as between-group difference in the safety event rate increases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4294559PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pst.1520DOI Listing

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