Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Biostatistics Center and Department of Biostatics and Bioinformatics, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2023 Feb 8;76(3):e1157-e1165. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciac692.
Traditional end points used in registrational randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) often do not allow for complete interpretation of the full range of potential clinical outcomes. Desirability of outcome ranking (DOOR) is an approach to the design and analysis of clinical trials that incorporates benefits and risks of novel treatment strategies and provides a global assessment of patient experience.
Through a multidisciplinary committee of experts in infectious diseases, clinical trial design, drug regulation, and patient experience, we developed a DOOR end point for infectious disease syndromes and demonstrated how this could be applied to 3 registrational drug trials (ZEUS, APEKS-cUTI, and DORI-05) for complicated urinary tract infections (cUTIs). ZEUS compared fosfomycin to piperacillin/tazobactam, APEKS-cUTI compared cefiderocol to imipenem, and DORI-05 compared doripenem to levofloxacin. Using DOOR, we estimated the probability of a more desirable outcome with each investigational antibacterial drug.
In each RCT, the DOOR distribution was similar and the probability that a patient in the investigational arm would have a more desirable outcome than a patient in the control arm had a 95% confidence interval containing 50%, indicating no significant difference between treatment arms. DOOR facilitated improved understanding of potential trade-offs between clinical efficacy and safety. Partial credit and subgroup analyses also highlight unique attributes of DOOR.
DOOR can effectively be used in registrational cUTI trials. The DOOR end point presented here can be adapted for other infectious disease syndromes and prospectively incorporated into future clinical trials.
传统的注册随机对照试验(RCT)终点通常无法全面解释潜在的临床结局。结果偏好排序(DOOR)是一种临床试验设计和分析方法,它纳入了新型治疗策略的获益和风险,并对患者体验进行全面评估。
通过传染病学、临床试验设计、药物监管和患者体验方面的多学科专家委员会,我们开发了一种传染病综合征的 DOOR 终点,并展示了如何将其应用于 3 项用于复杂尿路感染(cUTI)的注册药物试验(ZEUS、APEXS-cUTI 和 DORI-05)。ZEUS 比较了磷霉素与哌拉西林/他唑巴坦,APEXS-cUTI 比较了头孢地尔与亚胺培南,DORI-05 比较了多利培南与左氧氟沙星。使用 DOOR,我们估计了每种研究用抗菌药物更理想结局的可能性。
在每项 RCT 中,DOOR 分布相似,且与对照组相比,研究组中患者有更理想结局的概率有 95%置信区间包含 50%,表明治疗组之间无显著差异。DOOR 有助于更好地理解临床疗效和安全性之间的潜在权衡。部分计分和亚组分析也突出了 DOOR 的独特属性。
DOOR 可有效地用于注册 cUTI 试验。此处提出的 DOOR 终点可适用于其他传染病综合征,并前瞻性地纳入未来的临床试验。