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Composite end points and competing risks analysis

Víctor Dayan, Stuart W Grant, James M. Brophy, Fabio Barili, Nick Freemantle

2024Interdisciplinary CardioVascular and Thoracic Surgery6 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Composite end points are common primary outcomes in clinical trials. Their main benefit of utilizing a composite outcome is increasing the number of primary outcome events, meaning fewer participants are required to deliver an adequately powered trial. By combining multiple important end points in the primary outcome rather than having to select only 1, composite end points potentially make clinically meaningful benefits easier to detect and avoid ranking outcomes hierarchically. However, there are a number of important considerations when designing and interpreting clinical trials that utilize composite end points. In this Statistical Primer, issues with composite end points such as competing events, halo effect, risk of bias, time-to-event limitations and the win ratio are discussed in the context of real world clinical trials.

Topics & Concepts

Context (archaeology)Outcome (game theory)Clinical trialRanking (information retrieval)Event (particle physics)Composite numberComputer sciencePsychologyStatisticsMedicineArtificial intelligenceMathematicsHistoryAlgorithmPathologyMathematical economicsArchaeologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsStatistical Methods in Clinical TrialsHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of LifeAdvanced Causal Inference Techniques
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