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“Super‐covariates”: Using predicted control group outcome as a covariate in randomized clinical trials

Björn Holzhauer, Emmanuel T. Adewuyi

2023Pharmaceutical Statistics11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The power of randomized controlled clinical trials to demonstrate the efficacy of a drug compared with a control group depends not just on how efficacious the drug is, but also on the variation in patients' outcomes. Adjusting for prognostic covariates during trial analysis can reduce this variation. For this reason, the primary statistical analysis of a clinical trial is often based on regression models that besides terms for treatment and some further terms (e.g., stratification factors used in the randomization scheme of the trial) also includes a baseline (pre-treatment) assessment of the primary outcome. We suggest to include a "super-covariate"-that is, a patient-specific prediction of the control group outcome-as a further covariate (but not as an offset). We train a prognostic model or ensembles of such models on the individual patient (or aggregate) data of other studies in similar patients, but not the new trial under analysis. This has the potential to use historical data to increase the power of clinical trials and avoids the concern of type I error inflation with Bayesian approaches, but in contrast to them has a greater benefit for larger sample sizes. It is important for prognostic models behind "super-covariates" to generalize well across different patient populations in order to similarly reduce unexplained variability whether the trial(s) to develop the model are identical to the new trial or not. In an example in neovascular age-related macular degeneration we saw efficiency gains from the use of a "super-covariate".

Topics & Concepts

CovariateClinical trialRandomizationStatisticsBayesian probabilityRandomized controlled trialSample size determinationOutcome (game theory)MedicineEconometricsInternal medicineMathematicsMathematical economicsAdvanced Causal Inference TechniquesStatistical Methods and InferenceStatistical Methods in Clinical Trials
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