Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States of America.
Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Aug 12;14(8):e0219894. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219894. eCollection 2019.
Cluster-randomized trials (CRTs) are being increasingly used to test a range of interventions, including medical interventions commonly used in clinical practice. Policies created by the NIH and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) require the reporting of demographics and the examination of demographic heterogeneity of treatment effect (HTE) for individually randomized trials. Little is known about how frequent demographics are reported and HTE analyses are conducted in CRTs.
We sought to understand the prevalence of HTE analyses and the statistical methods used to conduct them in CRTs focused on treating cardiovascular disease, cancer, and chronic lower respiratory diseases. Additionally, we also report on the proportion of CRTs that reported on baseline demographics of its populations and conducted demographic HTE analyses.
We searched PubMed and Embase for CRTs published between 1/1/2010 and 3/29/2016 that focused on treating the top 3 Center for Disease Control causes of death (cardiovascular disease, chronic lower respiratory disease, and cancer). Evidence Screening And Review: Of 1,682 unique titles, 117 abstracts were screened. After excluding 53 articles, we included 64 CRT publications and abstracted information on study characteristics and demographic information, statistical analysis, HTE analysis, and study quality.
Age and sex were reported in greater than 95.3% of CRTs, while race and ethnicity were reported in only 20.3% of CRTs. HTE analyses were conducted in 28.1% (n = 18) of included CRTs and 77.8% (n = 12) were prespecified analyses. Four CRTs conducted a demographic subgroup analysis. Only 6/18 CRTs used interaction testing to determine whether HTE existed.
Baseline demographic reporting was high for age and sex in CRTs, but was uncommon for race and ethnicity. HTE analyses were uncommon and was rare for demographic subgroups, which limits the ability to examine the extent of benefits or risks for treatments tested with CRT designs.
集群随机试验(CRT)越来越多地被用于测试一系列干预措施,包括临床实践中常用的医学干预措施。美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)和食品和药物管理局(FDA)制定的政策要求报告人口统计学数据,并检查个体随机试验治疗效果的人口统计学异质性(HTE)。对于 CRT 中报告人口统计学数据和进行 HTE 分析的频率知之甚少。
我们旨在了解关注心血管疾病、癌症和慢性下呼吸道疾病治疗的 CRT 中 HTE 分析的流行情况以及用于进行这些分析的统计方法。此外,我们还报告了报告其人群基线人口统计学数据和进行人口统计学 HTE 分析的 CRT 比例。
我们在 PubMed 和 Embase 中搜索了 2010 年 1 月 1 日至 2016 年 3 月 29 日期间发表的 CRT,重点是治疗疾病控制中心(CDC)前三大死因(心血管疾病、慢性下呼吸道疾病和癌症)。证据筛选和审查:在 1682 个独特标题中,筛选了 117 个摘要。排除 53 篇文章后,我们纳入了 64 篇 CRT 出版物,并提取了研究特征和人口统计学信息、统计分析、HTE 分析和研究质量信息。
年龄和性别在超过 95.3%的 CRT 中得到报告,而种族和民族仅在 20.3%的 CRT 中得到报告。在纳入的 CRT 中,28.1%(n=18)进行了 HTE 分析,其中 77.8%(n=12)是预设分析。有 4 项 CRT 进行了人口统计学亚组分析。只有 6/18 的 CRT 使用交互检验来确定是否存在 HTE。
CRT 中年龄和性别报告的基线人口统计学数据较高,但种族和民族报告的情况并不常见。HTE 分析很少见,人口统计学亚组分析也很少见,这限制了使用 CRT 设计检验治疗效果的程度。