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Quantitative assessment of adverse events in clinical trials: Comparison of methods at an interim and the final analysis
Author(s) -
Hollaender Norbert,
GonzalezMaffe Juan,
Jehl Valentine
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
biometrical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.108
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1521-4036
pISSN - 0323-3847
DOI - 10.1002/bimj.201800234
Subject(s) - statistics , censoring (clinical trials) , estimator , nonparametric statistics , interim analysis , event (particle physics) , interim , inverse probability , medicine , mathematics , econometrics , clinical trial , posterior probability , bayesian probability , physics , archaeology , quantum mechanics , history
In clinical study reports (CSRs), adverse events (AEs) are commonly summarized using the incidence proportion (IP). IPs can be calculated for all types of AEs and are often interpreted as the probability that a treated patient experiences specific AEs. Exposure time can be taken into account with time‐to‐event methods. Using one minus Kaplan–Meier (1‐KM) is known to overestimate the AE probability in the presence of competing events (CEs). The use of a nonparametric estimator of the cumulative incidence function (CIF) has therefore been advocated as more appropriate. In this paper, we compare different methods to estimate the probability of one selected AE. In particular, we investigate whether the proposed methods provide a reasonable estimate of the AE probability at an interim analysis (IA). The characteristics of the methods in the presence of a CE are illustrated using data from a breast cancer study and we quantify the potential bias in a simulation study. At the final analysis performed for the CSR, 1‐KM systematically overestimates and in most cases IP slightly underestimates the given AE probability. CIF has the lowest bias in most simulation scenarios. All methods might lead to biased estimates at the IA except for AEs with early onset. The magnitude of the bias varies with the time‐to‐AE and/or CE occurrence, the selection of event‐specific hazards and the amount of censoring. In general, reporting AE probabilities for prespecified fixed time points is recommended.

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