1 / 65

Generalized pairwise comparisons of prioritized outcomes in the two-sample problem

Marc Buyse, ScD IDDI, Louvain-la-Neuve, and I-BioStat, Hasselt University, Belgium marc.buyse@iddi.com. Generalized pairwise comparisons of prioritized outcomes in the two-sample problem. Outline. Key problems in clinical development An example in cancer A bit of theory

varana
Download Presentation

Generalized pairwise comparisons of prioritized outcomes in the two-sample problem

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marc Buyse, ScD IDDI, Louvain-la-Neuve, and I-BioStat, Hasselt University, Belgium marc.buyse@iddi.com Generalized pairwise comparisons of prioritized outcomes in the two-sample problem

  2. Outline • Key problems in clinicaldevelopment • An example in cancer • A bit of theory • Back to the example • Anotherexample in ophthalmology • Conclusions

  3. KEY PROBLEMS IN CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT

  4. Development costs are too high…

  5. Development times are too long… Source: Steven Hirschfeld (FDA) Ref: Steven Hirschfeld, FDA (personal communication)

  6. Too few new drugs are approved… Ref: Arthur D. Little’s views on key Pharma trends, March 31, 2010

  7. AN EXAMPLE IN CANCER

  8. Advanced colorectal cancer 420 subjects with previously untreated metastatic colorectal cancer R 210 210 LV5FU2 + oxaliplatin LV5FU2 new combination of 5-fluorouracil, leucovorin and oxaliplatin standard regimen of 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin until disease progression, intolerance to treatment, or death

  9. Progression-free survival HR = 0.66, P = 0.0003

  10. Survival HR = 0.83, P = 0.12

  11. Oxaliplatin approved for metastatic colorectal cancer • In France (AFSSAPS) in 1996 • In Europe (EMEA) in 1999 • In the US (FDA) in 2002

  12. Problems? • The twoendpoints (OS and PFS) are analyzedseparately. One endpointsuggests (PFS) statisticallysignificantbenefit, the other (OS) does not. On balance, do we claim treatment to bebetter?

  13. Problems? • The twoendpoints (OS and PFS) are analyzedseparately. One endpointsuggests (PFS) statisticallysignificantbenefit, the other (OS) does not. On balance, do we claim treatment to bebetter? • Neitherendpointisperfect: • PFS is not confounded by othertreatments, islessaffected by unrelated causes of death, and has more events • OS isclinicallymost relevant and ismeasuredwithoutbias or error

  14. Problems? • The twoendpoints (OS and PFS) are analyzedseparately. One endpointsuggests (PFS) statisticallysignificantbenefit, the other (OS) does not. On balance, do we claim treatment to bebetter? • Neitherendpointisperfect: • PFS is not confounded by othertreatments, islessaffected by unrelated causes of death, and has more events • OS isclinicallymost relevant and ismeasuredwithoutbias or error • The PFS ignores the time between progression and death. The time to first event ignores subsequentevents. Thus, LV5FU2 + oxaliplatin might prolong the PFS of some patients, but shorten their remaining survival afterwards.

  15. Problems? • The twoendpoints (OS and PFS) are analyzedseparately. One endpointsuggests (PFS) statisticallysignificantbenefit, the other (OS) does not. On balance, do we claim treatment to bebetter? • Neitherendpointisperfect: • PFS is not confounded by othertreatments, islessaffected by unrelated causes of death, and has more events • OS isclinicallymost relevant and ismeasuredwithoutbias or error • The PFS ignores the time between progression and death. The time to first event ignores subsequentevents. Thus, LV5FU2 + oxaliplatin might prolong the PFS of some patients, but shorten their remaining survival afterwards. • Traditionalmethods of analysiscannotdifferentiatebetween a modestbenefit in all patients and a large benefit in some patients.

  16. A BIT OF THEORY

  17. General Setup Eligible subjects R Treatment (T ) Control (C ) Let Yjbe the outcome of j thsubject in C (j = 1, … , m ) Let Xibe the outcome of i thsubject in T (i = 1, … , n )

  18. Recall the Wilcoxon test Xi and Yj are realizations of a continuous or an ordereddiscrete variable. Let S1 , S2 , … , Sn be the orderedranks of the outcomesobserved in T. Wilcoxon (1945) proposed the test statistic with expectation and variance

  19. The Mann-Whitney form of the Wilcoxon test The Wilcoxon test statisticcanbederivedfromconsideration of all possible pairs of subjects, one fromeachtreatment group. Let The Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test statisticWcanbewritten as

  20. Gehan generalized the Wilcoxon test Gehan (1965) generalized the Wilcoxon test to the case of censoredoutcomes. Letting   and denotecensored observations, the pairwisecomparisonindicatorisnow

  21. First, generalize the test further for a single outcome measure Now let Xi and Yjbeobservedoutcomes for anyoutcomemeasure (continuous, time to event, binary, categorical, …) All werequireisthat the pairwisecomparison of observedoutcomesXiand Yjbe able to classify the pair as favoringT , C , or neither (if outcomesXiand Yjare tied or if eitheroutcomeismissing). pairwise comparison Xi Yj favorsC (unfavorable) favorsT (favorable) uninformative neutral

  22. Continuous outcome measure

  23. Time to event outcome measure

  24. Binary outcome measure

  25. Generalized pairwise comparisons Let Xi and Yjbevectors of observedoutcomes for anynumber of occasions of a single outcomemeasure, or anynumber of outcomemeasuresthatcanbeprioritized. All werequireisthat the pairwisecomparison of prioritizedoutcomesXiand Yjbe able to classify the pair as favorable, unfavorable, or neither.

  26. Next, generalize the test to prioritized repeated observations of a single outcome measure…

  27. Last, generalize the test to severalprioritized outcome measures…

  28. A general measure of treatment effect Extend the previousdefinition of Uij Uis the differencebetween the proportion of favorable pairs and the proportion of unfavorable pairs. We call thisgeneralmeasure of treatmenteffect the « proportion in favor of treatment » ().

  29. The proportion in favor of treatment () is a linear transformation of the probabilistic index, P (X > Y ):

  30. The proportion in favor treatment () For a binary variable,  isequal to the difference in proportions For a continuous variable ,  isrelated to the effect size d For a time-to-event variable,  isrelated to the hazard ratio  and the proportion of informative pairs f

  31. A re-randomization test for  The test statisticU (or ) no longer has known expectation and variance. An empirical distribution of  canbeobtainedthroughre-randomization. Tests of significance and confidence intervalsfollow suit.

  32. BACK TO THE EXAMPLE

  33. Prioritized outcomes for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer

  34. Prioritized outcomes for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer

  35. Prioritized outcomes for patients with early HER2neu overexpressing breast cancer

  36. Progression-free survival GENERALIZED PAIRWISE COMPARISONS (44,100 pairs)

  37. Overall survival GENERALIZED PAIRWISE COMPARISONS (44,100 pairs)

  38. Magnitude of benefits

  39. Prioritized outcomes GENERALIZED PAIRWISE COMPARISONS (44,100 pairs)

  40. ANOTHER EXAMPLE

  41. Age-related Macular Degeneration 592 subjects with neovascular age-related macular degeneration R 296 296 Pegaptanib Sham Intravitreous injections of 3 mg of pegaptanib (an anti–vascular endothelial growth factor) Sham injections (with a syringe applied on the surface of the eye to simulate the pressure of an injection) every 6 weeks over a period of 54 weeks

  42. Endpoints N C K Z O R H S D K D O V H R C Z R H S O N H R C Measurement of visual acuity (number of letters of standardized chart correctly read) every 6 weeks

  43. Mean visual acuity over time

  44. Endpoints N C K Z O R H S D K D O V H R C Z R H S O N H R C “clinically relevant loss”: 15 letters  3 lines Primary endpoint: loss of < 15 letters of visual acuity at one year (prevention of major vision loss)

  45. The whole data, and nothing but the data: measurements of visual acuity

  46. Measurements of visual acuity with last observation carried forward

  47. Measurements of visual acuityat week 0 and week 54

  48. Measurements of visual acuitychanges from week 0 to week 54

  49. Loss < 15 letters in visual acuity between weeks 0 and 54

More Related