Objectives: Randomized controlled trials are the gold-standard for determining therapeutic efficacy, but are often unrepresentative of real-world settings. Statistical transportation methods (hereafter transportation) can partially account for these differences, improving trial applicability without breaking randomization. We transported treatment effects from two heart failure (HF) trials to a HF registry.

Study Design And Setting: Individual-patient-level data from two trials (Carvedilol or Metoprolol European Trial (COMET), comparing carvedilol and metoprolol, and digitalis investigation group trial (DIG), comparing digoxin and placebo) and a Scottish HF registry were obtained. The primary end point for both trials was all-cause mortality; composite outcomes were all-cause mortality or hospitalization for COMET and HF-related death or hospitalization for DIG. We performed transportation using regression-based and inverse odds of sampling weights (IOSW) approaches.

Results: Registry patients were older, had poorer renal function and received higher-doses of loop-diuretics than trial participants. For each trial, point estimates were similar for the original and IOSW (e.g., DIG composite outcome: OR 0.75 (0.69, 0.82) vs. 0.73 (0.64, 0.83)). Treatment effect estimates were also similar when examining high-risk (0.64 (0.46, 0.89)) and low-risk registry patients (0.73 (0.61, 0.86)). Similar results were obtained using regression-based transportation.

Conclusion: Regression-based or IOSW approaches can be used to transport trial effect estimates to patients administrative/registry data, with only moderate reductions in precision.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2023.08.019DOI Listing

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