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Inference in response-adaptive clinical trials when the enrolled population varies over time
Authors:Massimiliano Russo  Steffen Ventz  Victoria Wang  Lorenzo Trippa
Institution:1. Harvard Medical School, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA;2. T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract:A common assumption of data analysis in clinical trials is that the patient population, as well as treatment effects, do not vary during the course of the study. However, when trials enroll patients over several years, this hypothesis may be violated. Ignoring variations of the outcome distributions over time, under the control and experimental treatments, can lead to biased treatment effect estimates and poor control of false positive results. We propose and compare two procedures that account for possible variations of the outcome distributions over time, to correct treatment effect estimates, and to control type-I error rates. The first procedure models trends of patient outcomes with splines. The second leverages conditional inference principles, which have been introduced to analyze randomized trials when patient prognostic profiles are unbalanced across arms. These two procedures are applicable in response-adaptive clinical trials. We illustrate the consequences of trends in the outcome distributions in response-adaptive designs and in platform trials, and investigate the proposed methods in the analysis of a glioblastoma study.
Keywords:adaptive trial design  bootstrap  glioblastoma  platform trials  population trends  splines
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