Abstract

BackgroundMost clinical trials with time-to-event primary outcomes are designed assuming constant event rates and proportional hazards over time. Non-constant event rates and non-proportional hazards are seen increasingly frequently in trials. The objectives of this review were firstly to identify whether non-constant event rates and time-dependent treatment effects were allowed for in sample size calculations of trials, and secondly to assess the methods used for the analysis and reporting of time-to-event outcomes including how researchers accounted for non-proportional treatment effects.MethodsWe reviewed all original reports published between January and June 2017 in four high impact medical journals for trials for which the primary outcome involved time-to-event analysis. We recorded the methods used to analyse and present the main outcomes of the trial and assessed the reporting of assumptions underlying these methods. The sample size calculation was reviewed to see if the effect of either non-constant hazard rates or anticipated non-proportionality of the treatment effect was allowed for during the trial design.ResultsFrom 446 original reports we identified 66 trials with a time-to-event primary outcome encompassing trial start dates from July 1995 to November 2014. The majority of these trials (73%) had sample size calculations that used standard formulae with a minority of trials (11%) using simulation for anticipated changing event rates and/or non-proportional hazards. Well-established analytical methods, Kaplan-Meier curves (98%), the log rank test (88%) and the Cox proportional hazards model (97%), were used almost exclusively for the main outcome. Parametric regression models were considered in 11% of the reports. Of the trials reporting inference from the Cox model, only 11% reported any results of testing the assumption of proportional hazards.ConclusionsOur review confirmed that when designing trials with time-to-event primary outcomes, methodologies assuming constant event rates and proportional hazards were predominantly used despite potential efficiencies in sample size needed or power achieved using alternative methods. The Cox proportional hazards model was used almost exclusively to present inferential results, yet testing and reporting of the pivotal assumption underpinning this estimation method was lacking.

Highlights

  • Most clinical trials with time-to-event primary outcomes are designed assuming constant event rates and proportional hazards over time

  • We found encouraging signs that researchers are beginning to anticipate the impacts of non-proportional hazards and changing event rates on sample size calculations evidenced by seven trials using simulation-based procedures for their determination of sample size

  • In this review, we explored whether researchers account for non-constant event rates and non-proportional treatment effects during the design, analysis and reporting phases of randomised trials

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Most clinical trials with time-to-event primary outcomes are designed assuming constant event rates and proportional hazards over time. The objectives of this review were firstly to identify whether non-constant event rates and time-dependent treatment effects were allowed for in sample size calculations of trials, and secondly to assess the methods used for the analysis and reporting of time-to-event outcomes including how researchers accounted for non-proportional treatment effects. Time-to-event analysis, or survival analysis, has become the most widely utilized analytical method in research articles in leading general medical journals over the past two decades [1]. These analytical methods compare the duration of time until an event of interest occurs between different intervention groups. The Cox proportional hazards (PH) model [2] has become ubiquitous as the primary method for assessing treatment effects in RCTs with time-to-event outcomes. Despite the popularity of the Cox PH model to estimate treatment effects, consideration of the fundamental assumption of proportional hazards is not always considered and reported [3]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call