Department of Surgery and Oncology, London Regional Cancer Program, St Joseph's Health Care and London Health Sciences Centre, Western University, London, ON, Canada.
Department of Surgery, University Health Network, Princess Margaret Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Ann Surg Oncol. 2021 Jan;28(1):39-47. doi: 10.1245/s10434-020-08575-7. Epub 2020 May 19.
Serious concerns regarding quality of conduct and reporting of noninferiority trials (NITs) have been raised. Systematic analysis of the quality of the surgical NITs is lacking. Assessing the quality of conduct, reporting, and interpretation of surgical NITs in cancer patients is critical given their potential clinical impact. We aim to assess the quality of conduct, reporting, and interpretation of NITs that investigate the effects of surgical management in cancer patients.
A cross-sectional analysis of papers identified through a comprehensive literature database search was performed. Forty papers employing a phase III noninferiority (NI) randomized trial design to study effects of surgical methodology or sequencing of surgery in patients with solid cancers were included. Papers were assessed for type of analysis, justification of the noninferiority margin (NIM), consistency of type I error with confidence intervals (CIs), ability to achieve the predefined sample size, and interpretations regarding NI.
Only half of the papers used both intention-to-treat and per protocol analyses; 62.5% provided no or poor justification for the NIM; 42.5% showed inconsistency of the type I error rate with CIs; 52.5% were deemed poor or fair quality, and 60.0% did not achieve the predefined sample size. One-fifth of the papers provided interpretation of the NI hypothesis that was not in concordance with the CONSORT guidelines.
The quality of conduct, reporting, and interpretation of surgical NITs is suboptimal, requiring further improvements through adherence to guidelines and rigorous assessment at the stages of the study approval, funding, and the peer-review process.
人们对非劣效性试验(NIT)的行为和报告质量提出了严重关切。缺乏对手术 NIT 质量的系统分析。鉴于手术 NIT 对癌症患者的潜在临床影响,评估其行为、报告和解释的质量至关重要。我们旨在评估旨在研究癌症患者手术管理效果的 NIT 的行为、报告和解释的质量。
通过全面的文献数据库搜索,对已确定的论文进行了横断面分析。纳入了 40 篇采用 III 期非劣效性(NI)随机试验设计研究手术方法或手术顺序对实体癌患者影响的论文。对论文进行了分析类型、非劣效性边界(NIM)的合理性、置信区间(CI)内的 I 类错误率一致性、实现预设样本量的能力以及对 NI 的解释的评估。
只有一半的论文同时使用了意向治疗和方案分析;62.5%的论文没有或仅提供了 NIM 的不合理依据;42.5%的论文显示 I 类错误率与 CI 不一致;52.5%的论文被认为质量较差或一般,60.0%的论文没有达到预设的样本量。五分之一的论文对 NI 假设的解释与 CONSORT 指南不一致。
手术 NIT 的行为、报告和解释的质量不理想,需要通过遵守指南和在研究批准、资金和同行评审阶段进行严格评估来进一步改进。