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The tyranny of non-inferiority trials. | LitMetric

The tyranny of non-inferiority trials.

Lancet Oncol

Optimal Cancer Care Alliance, Ann Arbor, MI, USA; Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Charles S Kettles VA Medical Center, Ann Arbor, MI, USA; Division of Oncology and Lung Precision Oncology Program, University of Michigan Division of Hematology/Oncology, Rogel Cancer Center, Institute for Health Policy and Innovation, and Center for Global Health Equity, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Current treatment options are limited by the expectation that alternative therapies must be proven "non-inferior" to existing ones, making trials expensive and complex.
  • Non-inferiority trials often overlook important factors like variability in treatment outcomes and place excessive burdens of proof on alternatives, especially in terms of toxicity and cost.
  • The authors suggest moving away from labeling trials as superiority or non-inferiority, advocating instead for a simpler description of trials as "comparative" to promote better patient-centered treatment options.

Article Abstract

Opportunities to decrease the toxicity and cost of approved treatment regimens with lower dose, less frequent, or shorter duration alternative regimens have been limited by the perception that alternatives must be non-inferior to approved regimens. Non-inferiority trials are large and expensive to do, because they must show statistically that the alternative and approved therapies differ in a single outcome, by a margin far smaller than that required to demonstrate superiority. Non-inferiority's flaws are manifest: it ignores variability expected to occur with repeated evaluation of the approved therapy, fails to recognise that a trial of similar design will be labelled as superiority or non-inferiority depending on whether it is done prior to or after initial registration of the approved treatment, and relegates endpoints such as toxicity and cost. For example, while a less toxic and less costly regimen of 3 months duration would typically be required to demonstrate efficacy that is non-inferior to that of a standard regimen of 6 months to displace it, the longer duration therapy has no such obligation to prove its superiority. This situation is the tyranny of the non-inferiority trial: its statistics perpetuate less cost-effective regimens, which are not patient-centred, even when less intensive therapies confer survival benefits nearly identical to those of the standard, by placing a disproportionately large burden of proof on the alternative. This approach is illogical. We propose that the designation of trials as superiority or non-inferiority be abandoned, and that randomised, controlled trials should henceforth be described simply as "comparative".

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(24)00218-3DOI Listing

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