AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focused on a new method called Desirability of Outcome Ranking (DOOR), which combines safety and efficacy measures in clinical trials for complicated intra-abdominal infections (cIAI) to assess overall patient outcomes.
  • - Researchers developed a cIAI-specific DOOR endpoint using data from 9 Phase 3 trials, analyzing how well patients responded to study treatments compared to control groups in terms of health outcomes.
  • - Key findings showed that patients with worse outcomes experienced more complications and surgeries, and the DOOR estimates indicated similar probabilities of better outcomes between treatment arms, demonstrating a structured way to evaluate clinical experiences in such trials.

Article Abstract

Background: Desirability of outcome ranking (DOOR) is a novel approach to clinical trial design that incorporates safety and efficacy assessments into an ordinal ranking system to evaluate overall outcomes of clinical trial participants. Here, we derived and applied a disease-specific DOOR endpoint to registrational trials for complicated intra-abdominal infection (cIAI).

Methods: Initially, we applied an a priori DOOR prototype to electronic patient-level data from 9 phase 3 noninferiority trials for cIAI submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration between 2005 and 2019. We derived a cIAI-specific DOOR endpoint based on clinically meaningful events that trial participants experienced. Next, we applied the cIAI-specific DOOR endpoint to the same datasets and, for each trial, estimated the probability that a participant assigned to the study treatment would have a more desirable DOOR or component outcome than if assigned to the comparator.

Results: Three key findings informed the cIAI-specific DOOR endpoint: (1) a significant proportion of participants underwent additional surgical procedures related to their baseline infection; (2) infectious complications of cIAI were diverse; and (3) participants with worse outcomes experienced more infectious complications, more serious adverse events, and underwent more procedures. DOOR distributions between treatment arms were similar in all trials. DOOR probability estimates ranged from 47.4% to 50.3% and were not significantly different. Component analyses depicted risk-benefit assessments of study treatment versus comparator.

Conclusions: We designed and evaluated a potential DOOR endpoint for cIAI trials to further characterize overall clinical experiences of participants. Similar data-driven approaches can be utilized to create other infectious disease-specific DOOR endpoints.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10443999PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciad239DOI Listing

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