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A novel estimand to adjust for rescue treatment in randomized clinical trials

Hege Michiels, Cristina Sotto, An Vandebosch, Stijn Vansteelandt

2021Statistics in Medicine14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The interpretation of randomized clinical trial results is often complicated by intercurrent events. For instance, rescue medication is sometimes given to patients in response to worsening of their disease, either in addition to the randomized treatment or in its place. The use of such medication complicates the interpretation of the intention-to-treat analysis. In view of this, we propose a novel estimand defined as the intention-to-treat effect that would have been observed, had patients on the active arm been switched to rescue medication if and only if they would have been switched when randomized to control. This enables us to disentangle the treatment effect from the effect of rescue medication on a patient's outcome, while tempering the strong extrapolations that are typically needed when inferring what the intention-to-treat effect would have been in the absence of rescue medication. We propose a novel inverse probability weighting method for estimating this effect in settings where the decision to initiate rescue medication is made at one prespecified time point. This estimator relies on specific untestable assumptions, in view of which we propose a sensitivity analysis. We use the method for the analysis of a clinical trial conducted by Janssen Pharmaceuticals, in which patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus can switch to rescue medication for ethical reasons. Monte Carlo simulations confirm that the proposed estimator is unbiased in moderate sample sizes.

Topics & Concepts

Randomized controlled trialInverse probability weightingEstimatorMedicineClinical trialWeightingIntensive care medicineMEDLINEComputer scienceSample size determinationTreatment effectAdvanced Causal Inference TechniquesStatistical Methods in Clinical TrialsStatistical Methods and Bayesian Inference
A novel estimand to adjust for rescue treatment in randomized clinical trials | Litcius