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Adjusting for unknown bias in non-inferiority clinical trials.

Authors :
Odem-Davis K
Fleming TR
Source :
Statistics in biopharmaceutical research [Stat Biopharm Res] 2013 Jan 01; Vol. 5 (3).
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Evaluation of non-inferiority is based on ruling out a threshold for what would constitute unacceptable loss of efficacy of an experimental treatment relative to an active comparator "Standard". This threshold, the "non-inferiority margin", is often based on preservation of a percentage of Standard's effect. To obtain an estimate of this effect to be used in the development of the "non-inferiority margin", data are needed from earlier trials comparing Standard to placebo if the non-inferiority trial does not have a placebo arm. This approach often provides a biased over-estimate of Standard's true effect in the setting of the current non-inferiority study. We describe two commonly used non-inferiority margin methods that adjust for this bias, the two-confidence interval (95-95) and the Synthesis margins. However, the added 'variance inflation' adjustment made by 95-95 margin diminishes with increasing information from historical trial(s), and the Synthesis margin is based on a strong assumption that the relative bias is known. We introduce an alternative "Bias-adjusted" margin addressing vulnerabilities of each by attenuating the estimate and by accounting for uncertainty in the true level of bias. Examples and asymptotic estimates of non-inferiority hypothesis rejection rates in the proportional hazards setting are used to compare methods.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1946-6315
Volume :
5
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Statistics in biopharmaceutical research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24187607
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/19466315.2013.795910