Falk Daniel E, Litten Raye Z, Anton Raymond F, Kranzler Henry R, Johnson Bankole A
Division of Treatment and Recovery Research, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Bethesda, Maryland.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2014 Mar;75(2):335-46. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2014.75.335.
Several definitions of treatment response have been proposed for alcohol clinical trials (e.g., abstinence and no heavy drinking). However, each of these outcomes allows only one definition of successful response. In contrast, the cumulative proportion of responders analysis (CPRA) includes all of the possible drinking response cutoff points, providing a more complete picture of the therapeutic effects of a treatment. CPRA has been used to examine the efficacy of analgesics but not alcohol pharmacotherapy. To demonstrate its potential utility, we conducted CPRA in two large alcohol treatment trials: the COMBINE (Combined Pharmacotherapies and Behavioral Interventions for Alcohol Dependence) trial (naltrexone) and a multisite topiramate trial. CPRA was used to demonstrate the efficacy of naltrexone and topiramate on continuous measures of in-treatment drinking-heavy drinking days and drinks per day-and their reductions from pretreatment.
All possible cutoff points were portrayed for each measure. We provide graphs to illustrate the effects of the active medications compared with placebo and examined them statistically over a number of salient drinking outcomes to evaluate their efficacy.
Treatment group responder curves were not parallel across the entire range of cutoff points; rather, they separated only at lower levels of drinking. In general, effect sizes increased by 0.10-0.15 when going from the lowest drinking level cutoff (i.e., abstinence and no heavy drinking) to the cutoff associated with the maximal treatment effect.
CPRA may be useful in designing subsequent trials and helping to illustrate for treatment providers the likelihood of treatment success given various definitions of a positive response.
酒精临床试验已经提出了几种治疗反应的定义(例如,戒酒和无重度饮酒)。然而,这些结果中的每一个都只允许对成功反应有一个定义。相比之下,反应者累积比例分析(CPRA)包括了所有可能的饮酒反应临界点,能更全面地呈现一种治疗方法的治疗效果。CPRA已被用于检验镇痛药的疗效,但未用于酒精药物治疗。为了证明其潜在用途,我们在两项大型酒精治疗试验中进行了CPRA:联合治疗(酒精依赖的联合药物治疗和行为干预)试验(纳曲酮)和一项多中心托吡酯试验。CPRA用于证明纳曲酮和托吡酯在治疗期间连续饮酒指标(重度饮酒天数和每日饮酒量)及其与治疗前相比的减少量方面的疗效。
针对每项指标描绘了所有可能的临界点。我们提供图表来说明活性药物与安慰剂相比的效果,并在一些显著的饮酒结果上进行统计学检验以评估其疗效。
治疗组的反应者曲线在整个临界点范围内并非平行;相反,它们仅在较低饮酒水平时分开。一般来说,从最低饮酒水平临界点(即戒酒和无重度饮酒)到与最大治疗效果相关的临界点时,效应大小增加了0.10 - 0.15。
CPRA可能有助于设计后续试验,并帮助向治疗提供者说明在各种积极反应定义下治疗成功的可能性。