Smith Thomas A
Department of Public Health & Epidemiology, Swiss Tropical Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
Malar J. 2007 May 2;6:53. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-6-53.
Standard methods for defining clinical malaria in intervention trials in endemic areas do not guarantee that efficacy estimates will be unbiased, and do not indicate whether the intervention has its effect by modifying the force of infection, the parasite density, or the risk of pathology at given parasite density.
Three different sets, each of 500 Phase IIb or III malaria vaccine trials were simulated corresponding to each of a pre-erythrocytic, blood stage, and anti-disease vaccine, each in a population with 80% prevalence of patent malaria infection. Simulations considered only the primary effects of vaccination in a homogeneous trial population. The relationships between morbidity and parasite density and the performance of different case definitions for clinical malaria were analysed using conventional likelihood ratio tests to compare incidence of episodes defined using parasite density cut-offs. Bayesian latent class models were used to compare the overall frequencies of clinical malaria episodes in analyses that did not use diagnostic cut-offs.
The different simulated interventions led to different relationships between clinical symptoms and parasite densities. Consequently, the operating characteristics of parasitaemia cut-offs in general differ between vaccine and placebo arms of the simulated trials, leading to different patterns of bias in efficacy estimates depending on the type of intervention effect. Efficacy was underestimated when low parasitaemia cut-offs were used but the efficacy of an asexual blood stage vaccine was overestimated when a high parasitaemia cut-off was used. The power of a trial may be maximal using case definitions that are associated with substantial bias in efficacy.
Secondary analyses of the data of malaria intervention trials should consider the relationship between clinical symptoms and parasite density, and attempt to estimate overall numbers of clinical episodes and the degree of bias of the primary efficacy measure. Such analyses would help to clarify whether the effect of an intervention corresponds to that anticipated on the basis of the parasite stage that is targeted, and would highlight whether the primary measure of efficacy results from unexpected behaviour in the parasitological and clinical data used to estimate it.
在疟疾流行地区的干预试验中,用于定义临床疟疾的标准方法无法保证疗效估计无偏倚,也无法表明干预措施是通过改变感染强度、寄生虫密度还是在给定寄生虫密度下的发病风险来发挥作用。
模拟了三组不同的500项IIb期或III期疟疾疫苗试验,分别对应于三种疫苗:一种是针对疟原虫感染前期的疫苗、一种是针对血液期的疫苗以及一种是抗疾病疫苗,每项试验针对的人群中显性疟疾感染患病率均为80%。模拟仅考虑了在同质试验人群中疫苗接种的主要效果。使用传统似然比检验分析发病率与寄生虫密度之间的关系以及不同临床疟疾病例定义的表现,以比较使用寄生虫密度临界值定义的发作发生率。在未使用诊断临界值的分析中,使用贝叶斯潜在类别模型比较临床疟疾发作的总体频率。
不同的模拟干预措施导致临床症状与寄生虫密度之间呈现不同的关系。因此,模拟试验中疫苗组和安慰剂组的寄生虫血症临界值的操作特征通常存在差异,这导致根据干预效果类型的不同,疗效估计会出现不同的偏倚模式。使用低寄生虫血症临界值时,疗效被低估;而使用高寄生虫血症临界值时,无性血液期疫苗的疗效被高估。使用与疗效存在实质性偏倚相关的病例定义时,试验的效能可能达到最大。
疟疾干预试验数据的二次分析应考虑临床症状与寄生虫密度之间的关系,并尝试估计临床发作的总数以及主要疗效指标的偏倚程度。此类分析将有助于阐明干预措施的效果是否与基于所针对的寄生虫阶段预期的效果相符,并将突出主要疗效指标是否源于用于估计它的寄生虫学和临床数据中的意外表现。