AI Article Synopsis

  • Patient-reported outcomes like health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are crucial in cancer trials, but dropout rates among participants can lead to missing data and biased results.
  • The study compares the standard linear mixed model to a joint model that accounts for both HRQoL and dropout to identify when biases occur due to differences in patient outcomes.
  • Findings indicate that using the linear mixed model can incorrectly estimate HRQoL and skew comparisons between treatment groups, especially when poorer HRQoL correlates with higher dropout risks.

Article Abstract

Background: Patient-reported outcomes such as health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are increasingly used as endpoints in randomized cancer clinical trials. However, the patients often drop out so that observation of the HRQoL longitudinal outcome ends prematurely, leading to monotone missing data. The patients may drop out for various reasons including occurrence of toxicities, disease progression, or may die. In case of informative dropout, the usual linear mixed model analysis will produce biased estimates. Unbiased estimates cannot be obtained unless the dropout is jointly modeled with the longitudinal outcome, for instance by using a joint model composed of a linear mixed (sub)model linked to a survival (sub)model. Our objective was to investigate in a clinical trial context the consequences of using the most frequently used linear mixed model, the random intercept and slope model, rather than its corresponding joint model.

Methods: We first illustrate and compare the models on data of patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer. We then perform a more formal comparison through a simulation study.

Results: From the application, we derived hypotheses on the situations in which biases arise and on their nature. Through the simulation study, we confirmed and complemented these hypotheses and provided general explanations of the bias mechanisms.

Conclusions: In particular, this article reveals how the linear mixed model fails in the typical situation where poor HRQoL is associated with an increased risk of dropout and the experimental treatment improves survival. Unlike the joint model, in this situation the linear mixed model will overestimate the HRQoL in both arms, but not equally, misestimating the difference between the HRQoL trajectories of the two arms to the disadvantage of the experimental arm.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9912607PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12874-023-01846-3DOI Listing

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