A likely responder approach for the analysis of randomized controlled trials.

Contemp Clin Trials

Department of Psychiatry, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, One Park Avenue, New York, NY 10016, USA. Electronic address:

Published: March 2022

Objective: To further the precision medicine goal of tailoring medical treatment to individual patient characteristics by providing a method of analysis of the effect of test treatment, T, compared to a reference treatment, R, in participants in a RCT who are likely responders to T.

Methods: Likely responders to T are individuals whose expected response at baseline exceeds a prespecified minimum. A prognostic score, the expected response predicted as a function of baseline covariates, is obtained at trial completion. It is a balancing score that can be used to match likely responders randomized to T with those randomized to R; the result is comparable treatment groups that have a common covariance distribution. Treatments are compared based on observed outcomes in this enriched sample. The approach is illustrated in a RCT comparing two treatments for opioid use disorder.

Results: A standard statistical analysis of the opioid use disorder RCT found no treatment difference in the total sample. However, a subset of likely responders to T were identified and in this group, T was statistically superior to R.

Conclusion: The causal treatment effect of T relative to R among likely responders may be more important than the effect in the whole target population. The prognostic score function provides quantitative information to support patient specific treatment decisions regarding T furthering the goal of precision medicine.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8934276PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2022.106688DOI Listing

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