From the Borow Consulting Group, LLC, Bryn Mawr, PA (K.M.B.).
Vital Systems, Inc, Rolling Meadows, IL (A.Y.).
Circ Res. 2019 Jul 19;125(3):265-281. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.119.314951. Epub 2019 Jul 18.
Advanced heart failure (HF) is a progressive disease characterized by recurrent hospitalizations and high risk of mortality. Indeed, outcomes in late stages of HF approximate those seen in patients with various aggressive malignancies. Clinical trials assessing beneficial outcomes of new treatments in patients with cancer have used innovative approaches to measure impact on total disease burden or surrogates to assess treatment efficacy. Although most cardiovascular outcomes trials continue to use time-to-first event analyses to assess the primary efficacy end point, such analyses do not adequately reflect the impact of new treatments on the totality of the chronic disease burden. Consequently, patient enrichment and other strategies for ongoing clinical trial design, as well as new statistical methodologies, are important considerations, particularly when studying a population with advanced chronic HF. The DREAM-HF trial (Double-Blind Randomized Assessment of Clinical Events With Allogeneic Mesenchymal Precursor Cells in Advanced Heart Failure) is an ongoing, randomized, sham-controlled phase 3 study of the efficacy and safety of mesenchymal precursor cells as immunotherapy in patients with advanced chronic HF with reduced ejection fraction. Mesenchymal precursor cells have a unique multimodal mechanism of action that is believed to result in polarization of proinflammatory type 1 macrophages in the heart to an anti-inflammatory type 2 macrophage state, inhibition of maladaptive adverse left ventricular remodeling, reversal of cardiac and peripheral endothelial dysfunction, and recovery of deranged vasculature. The objective of DREAM-HF is to confirm earlier phase 2 results and evaluate whether mesenchymal precursor cells will reduce the rate of nonfatal recurrent HF-related major adverse cardiac events while delaying or preventing progression of HF to terminal cardiac events. DREAM-HF is an example of an ongoing contemporary events-driven cardiovascular cell-based immunotherapy study that has utilized the concepts of baseline disease enrichment, prognostic enrichment, and predictive enrichment to improve its efficiency by using accumulating data from within as well as external to the trial. Adaptive enrichment designs and strategies are important components of a rational approach to achieve clinical research objectives in shorter clinical trial timelines and with increased cost-effectiveness without compromising ethical standards or the overall statistical integrity of the study. The DREAM-HF trial also presents an alternative approach to traditional composite time-to-first event primary efficacy end points. Statistical methodologies such as the joint frailty model provide opportunities to expand the scope of events-driven HF with reduced ejection fraction clinical trials to utilize time to recurrent nonfatal HF-related major adverse cardiac events as the primary efficacy end point without compromising the integrity of the statistical analyses for terminal cardiac events. In advanced chronic HF with reduced ejection fraction studies, the joint frailty model is utilized to reflect characteristics of the high-risk patient population with important unmet therapeutic needs. In some cases, use of the joint frailty model may substantially reduce sample size requirements. In addition, using an end point that is acceptable to the Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency, such as recurrent nonfatal HF-related major adverse cardiac events, enables generation of clinically relevant pharmacoeconomic data while providing comprehensive views of the patient's overall cardiovascular disease burden. The major goal of this review is to provide lessons learned from the ongoing DREAM-HF trial that relate to biologic plausibility and flexible clinical trial design and are potentially applicable to other development programs of innovative therapies for patients with advanced cardiovascular disease. Clinical Trial Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02032004.
晚期心力衰竭(HF)是一种进行性疾病,其特征是反复住院和高死亡率。事实上,HF 晚期的预后与各种侵袭性恶性肿瘤患者的预后相当。评估癌症患者新疗法有益效果的临床试验采用了创新方法来衡量对总疾病负担的影响或替代指标来评估治疗效果。尽管大多数心血管结局试验仍继续使用首次事件时间分析来评估主要疗效终点,但此类分析不能充分反映新疗法对慢性疾病总负担的影响。因此,患者富集和其他持续临床试验设计策略以及新的统计方法学是重要的考虑因素,尤其是在研究晚期慢性 HF 患者时。DREAM-HF 试验(同种异体间充质前体细胞治疗晚期心力衰竭的双盲随机评估)是一项正在进行的、随机的、假对照的 3 期研究,评估间充质前体细胞作为免疫疗法在射血分数降低的晚期慢性 HF 患者中的疗效和安全性。间充质前体细胞具有独特的多模态作用机制,据信可导致心脏中促炎 1 型巨噬细胞向抗炎 2 型巨噬细胞状态极化,抑制适应性不良的左心室重构,逆转心脏和外周内皮功能障碍,并恢复紊乱的脉管系统。DREAM-HF 的目的是确认早期的 2 期结果,并评估间充质前体细胞是否会降低非致命性复发性 HF 相关主要不良心脏事件的发生率,同时延迟或预防 HF 进展为终末期心脏事件。DREAM-HF 是一项正在进行的、以当代事件驱动的心血管细胞免疫治疗为基础的研究范例,该研究利用了基线疾病富集、预后富集和预测富集的概念,通过利用试验内外的数据来提高其效率。适应性富集设计和策略是在不损害伦理标准或研究整体统计完整性的情况下,通过缩短临床试验时间线和提高成本效益来实现临床研究目标的合理方法的重要组成部分。DREAM-HF 试验还提出了一种替代传统复合首次事件主要疗效终点的方法。统计方法,如联合脆弱性模型,为利用复发性非致命性 HF 相关主要不良心脏事件作为主要疗效终点的射血分数降低的 HF 事件驱动临床试验扩展范围提供了机会,而不会损害终末期心脏事件的统计分析完整性。在射血分数降低的晚期慢性 HF 研究中,联合脆弱性模型用于反映具有重要未满足治疗需求的高危患者人群的特征。在某些情况下,使用联合脆弱性模型可能会大大减少样本量需求。此外,使用可接受的食品和药物管理局和欧洲药品管理局的终点,如复发性非致命性 HF 相关主要不良心脏事件,可在提供患者整体心血管疾病负担全面观点的同时生成有临床意义的药物经济学数据。本综述的主要目的是从正在进行的 DREAM-HF 试验中吸取经验教训,这些经验教训涉及生物学合理性和灵活的临床试验设计,并且可能适用于其他晚期心血管疾病患者创新疗法的开发计划。临床试验注册:网址:https://www.clinicaltrials.gov。唯一标识符:NCT02032004。