AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the use of Bayesian borrowing (BB) methods to improve the estimates of treatment effectiveness by enhancing an external control arm constructed from real-world data for patients with first-line non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
  • It examines the overall survival rates of patients treated with chemotherapy plus cetuximab compared to a constructed external control using historical trial data, revealing that BB provided more precise hazard ratio estimates than the matched patients in the randomized controlled trial (RCT).
  • Challenges were encountered in replicating overall survival estimates with the external control arm, attributed to factors like unmeasured confounding and variations in treatment timelines, highlighting how BB can refine effectiveness estimates and reveal biases when external data sources are suitably applied.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to improve comparative effectiveness estimates and discuss challenges encountered through the application of Bayesian borrowing (BB) methods to augment an external control arm (ECA) constructed from real-world data (RWD) using historical clinical trial data in first-line non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). An ECA for a randomized controlled trial (RCT) in first-line NSCLC was constructed using ConcertAI Patient360™ to assess chemotherapy with or without cetuximab, in the bevacizumab-inappropriate subpopulation. Cardinality matching was used to match patient characteristics between the treatment arm (cetuximab + chemotherapy) and ECA. Overall survival (OS) was assessed as the primary outcome using Cox proportional hazards (PH). BB was conducted using a static power prior under a Weibull PH parameterization with borrowing weights from 0.0 to 1.0 and augmentation of the ECA from a historical control trial. The constructed ECA yielded a higher overall survival (OS) hazard ratio (HR) (HR = 1.53; 95% CI: 1.21-1.93) than observed in the matched population of the RCT (HR = 0.91; 95% CI: 0.73-1.13). The OS HR decreased through the incorporation of BB (HR = 1.30; 95% CI: 1.08-1.54, borrowing weight = 1.0). BB was applied to augment the RCT control arm via a historical control which improved the precision of the observed HR estimate (1.03; 95% CI: 0.86-1.22, borrowing weight = 1.0), in comparison to the matched population of the RCT alone. In this study, the RWD ECA was unable to successfully replicate the OS estimates from the matched population of the selected RCT. The inability to replicate could be due to unmeasured confounding and variations in time-periods, follow-up and subsequent therapy. Despite these findings, we demonstrate how BB can improve precision of comparative effectiveness estimates, potentially aid as a bias assessment tool and mitigate challenges of traditional methods when appropriate external data sources are available.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11036906PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.57264/cer-2023-0175DOI Listing

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