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Intention-to-treat analyses for randomised controlled trials in hospice/palliative care: the case for analyses to be of people exposed to the intervention.

Kochovska, Slavica; Huang, Chao; Johnson, Miriam J.; Agar, Meera R.; Fallon, Marie T.; Kaasa, Stein; Hussain, Jamilla A.; Portenoy, Russell K.; Higginson, Irene J.; Currow, David C.

Authors

Slavica Kochovska

Meera R. Agar

Marie T. Fallon

Stein Kaasa

Jamilla A. Hussain

Russell K. Portenoy

Irene J. Higginson

David C. Currow



Abstract

© 2019 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine Context: Minimizing bias in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) includes intention-to-treat analyses. Hospice/palliative care RCTs are constrained by high attrition unpredictable when consenting, including withdrawals between randomization and first exposure to the intervention. Such withdrawals may systematically bias findings away from the new intervention being evaluated if they are considered nonresponders. Objectives: This study aimed to quantify the impact within intention-to-treat principles. Methods: A theoretical model was developed to assess the impact of withdrawals between randomization and first exposure on study power and effect sizes. Ten reported hospice/palliative care studies had power recalculated accounting for such withdrawal. Results: In the theoretical model, when 5% of withdrawals occurred between randomization and first exposure to the intervention, change in power was demonstrated in binary outcomes (2.0%–2.2%), continuous outcomes (0.8%–2.0%), and time-to-event outcomes (1.6%–2.0%), and odds ratios were changed by 0.06–0.17. Greater power loss was observed with larger effect sizes. Withdrawal rates were 0.9%–10% in the 10 reported RCTs, corresponding to power losses of 0.1%–2.2%. For studies with binary outcomes, withdrawal rates were 0.3%–1.2% changing odds ratios by 0.01–0.22. Conclusion: If blinding is maintained and all interventions are available simultaneously, our model suggests that excluding data from withdrawals between randomization and first exposure to the intervention minimizes one bias. This is the safety population as defined by the International Committee on Harmonization. When planning for future trials, minimizing the time between randomization and first exposure to the intervention will minimize the problem. Power should be calculated on people who receive the intervention.

Citation

Kochovska, S., Huang, C., Johnson, M. J., Agar, M. R., Fallon, M. T., Kaasa, S., …Currow, D. C. (2020). Intention-to-treat analyses for randomised controlled trials in hospice/palliative care: the case for analyses to be of people exposed to the intervention. Journal of pain and symptom management, 59(3), 637-645. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2019.10.026

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 26, 2019
Online Publication Date Nov 9, 2019
Publication Date Mar 1, 2020
Deposit Date Nov 7, 2019
Publicly Available Date Nov 7, 2019
Journal Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Print ISSN 0885-3924
Electronic ISSN 1873-6513
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 59
Issue 3
Pages 637-645
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2019.10.026
Keywords Intention-to-treat analyses; Palliative care; Randomised controlled trials; Good clinical practice; Study withdrawal; Imputation; Missing data; International Committee on Harmonization
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3108464
Publisher URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0885392419306438?via%3Dihub