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Current clinical trials evaluating combination therapy for pulmonary artery hypertension (PAH) may be longer than what is needed to demonstrate treatment benefit, results of a recent meta-analysis suggest.
study published in the May issue of the journal Chest®.
The meta-analysis by Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues included 3,801 patients enrolled in one of 15 previously published randomized clinical trials. Of those trials, four were long-term, event driven studies, with a mean duration of 87 weeks, while the remainder were shorter studies with a mean duration of 15 weeks.
For the long-term, event-driven trials, the mean number needed to treat (NNT) was 17.4 at week 16, gradually decreasing to 8.8 at 52 weeks of follow-up, remaining stable after that, according to investigators.
Consistent with that finding, the mean relative risk of clinical worsening was 0.38 at 16 weeks, and similarly, 0.41 at 26 weeks, investigators reported. After that, the relative risk progressively increased to 0.54 at 52 weeks and 0.68 at 104 weeks.
Looking at all trials combined, Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues observed that longer trial duration had a positive correlation with relative risk of clinical worsening (P = .0002).
Pragmatically, these results raise the possibility that PAH combination therapy trials could be shorter in duration. Some recent event-driven studies have lasted up to 6 years, with patients on treatment for about 2 of those years, investigators noted.
“In the context of an orphan disease with limited and competing recruitment for trials and the rapidly changing treatment paradigm in PAH, the optimal duration of future trials should be revisited,” Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues wrote in a discussion of their findings.
They also cautioned that NNT, a measure of how many patient treatments are needed to prevent one additional adverse event, could be “misleading” despite its value as a simple measure of treatment impact.
Likewise, relative risk can be misleading; for example, a treatment reducing event risk from 30% to 20% represents a relative risk reduction of approximately 35%, but so does a treatment reducing event risk from 3% to 2%, the researchers noted.
“Multiple factors, in addition to the efficacy of the therapy and the comparator, may directly influence the NNT and relative risk and should be taken into account in their interpretation,” they said in their report.
Dr. Lajoie had no disclosures related to the study. Her coauthors had disclosures related to Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Bayer, and GlaxoSmithKline, among others.
SOURCE: Lajoie AC et al. Chest. 2017 May;153(5):1142-52.
Key clinical point: A meta-analysis calls into question the need to perform pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) trials beyond 6 to 12 months of treatment in the future.
Major finding: The mean number needed to treat was stable at 52 weeks of follow-up and thereafter, while the mean relative risk of clinical worsening progressively increased from approximately 0.38 at week 16 to 0.68 at week 104.
Study details: A systematic review of 3,801 patients enrolled in 15 randomized clinical trials.
Disclosures: The authors reported disclosures related to Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Bayer, and GlaxoSmithKline, among other entities.
Source: Lajoie AC et al. Chest. 2017 May;153(5):1142-52.
Key clinical point: A meta-analysis calls into question the need to perform pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) trials beyond 6 to 12 months of treatment in the future.
Major finding: The mean number needed to treat was stable at 52 weeks of follow-up and thereafter, while the mean relative risk of clinical worsening progressively increased from approximately 0.38 at week 16 to 0.68 at week 104.
Study details: A systematic review of 3,801 patients enrolled in 15 randomized clinical trials.
Disclosures: The authors reported disclosures related to Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Bayer, and GlaxoSmithKline, among other entities.
Source: Lajoie AC et al. Chest. 2017 May;153(5):1142-52.
Key clinical point: A meta-analysis calls into question the need to perform pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) trials beyond 6 to 12 months of treatment in the future.
Major finding: The mean number needed to treat was stable at 52 weeks of follow-up and thereafter, while the mean relative risk of clinical worsening progressively increased from approximately 0.38 at week 16 to 0.68 at week 104.
Study details: A systematic review of 3,801 patients enrolled in 15 randomized clinical trials.
Disclosures: The authors reported disclosures related to Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Bayer, and GlaxoSmithKline, among other entities.
Source: Lajoie AC et al. Chest. 2017 May;153(5):1142-52.
Current clinical trials evaluating combination therapy for pulmonary artery hypertension (PAH) may be longer than what is needed to demonstrate treatment benefit, results of a recent meta-analysis suggest.
study published in the May issue of the journal Chest®.
The meta-analysis by Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues included 3,801 patients enrolled in one of 15 previously published randomized clinical trials. Of those trials, four were long-term, event driven studies, with a mean duration of 87 weeks, while the remainder were shorter studies with a mean duration of 15 weeks.
For the long-term, event-driven trials, the mean number needed to treat (NNT) was 17.4 at week 16, gradually decreasing to 8.8 at 52 weeks of follow-up, remaining stable after that, according to investigators.
Consistent with that finding, the mean relative risk of clinical worsening was 0.38 at 16 weeks, and similarly, 0.41 at 26 weeks, investigators reported. After that, the relative risk progressively increased to 0.54 at 52 weeks and 0.68 at 104 weeks.
Looking at all trials combined, Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues observed that longer trial duration had a positive correlation with relative risk of clinical worsening (P = .0002).
Pragmatically, these results raise the possibility that PAH combination therapy trials could be shorter in duration. Some recent event-driven studies have lasted up to 6 years, with patients on treatment for about 2 of those years, investigators noted.
“In the context of an orphan disease with limited and competing recruitment for trials and the rapidly changing treatment paradigm in PAH, the optimal duration of future trials should be revisited,” Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues wrote in a discussion of their findings.
They also cautioned that NNT, a measure of how many patient treatments are needed to prevent one additional adverse event, could be “misleading” despite its value as a simple measure of treatment impact.
Likewise, relative risk can be misleading; for example, a treatment reducing event risk from 30% to 20% represents a relative risk reduction of approximately 35%, but so does a treatment reducing event risk from 3% to 2%, the researchers noted.
“Multiple factors, in addition to the efficacy of the therapy and the comparator, may directly influence the NNT and relative risk and should be taken into account in their interpretation,” they said in their report.
Dr. Lajoie had no disclosures related to the study. Her coauthors had disclosures related to Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Bayer, and GlaxoSmithKline, among others.
SOURCE: Lajoie AC et al. Chest. 2017 May;153(5):1142-52.
Current clinical trials evaluating combination therapy for pulmonary artery hypertension (PAH) may be longer than what is needed to demonstrate treatment benefit, results of a recent meta-analysis suggest.
study published in the May issue of the journal Chest®.
The meta-analysis by Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues included 3,801 patients enrolled in one of 15 previously published randomized clinical trials. Of those trials, four were long-term, event driven studies, with a mean duration of 87 weeks, while the remainder were shorter studies with a mean duration of 15 weeks.
For the long-term, event-driven trials, the mean number needed to treat (NNT) was 17.4 at week 16, gradually decreasing to 8.8 at 52 weeks of follow-up, remaining stable after that, according to investigators.
Consistent with that finding, the mean relative risk of clinical worsening was 0.38 at 16 weeks, and similarly, 0.41 at 26 weeks, investigators reported. After that, the relative risk progressively increased to 0.54 at 52 weeks and 0.68 at 104 weeks.
Looking at all trials combined, Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues observed that longer trial duration had a positive correlation with relative risk of clinical worsening (P = .0002).
Pragmatically, these results raise the possibility that PAH combination therapy trials could be shorter in duration. Some recent event-driven studies have lasted up to 6 years, with patients on treatment for about 2 of those years, investigators noted.
“In the context of an orphan disease with limited and competing recruitment for trials and the rapidly changing treatment paradigm in PAH, the optimal duration of future trials should be revisited,” Dr. Lajoie and her colleagues wrote in a discussion of their findings.
They also cautioned that NNT, a measure of how many patient treatments are needed to prevent one additional adverse event, could be “misleading” despite its value as a simple measure of treatment impact.
Likewise, relative risk can be misleading; for example, a treatment reducing event risk from 30% to 20% represents a relative risk reduction of approximately 35%, but so does a treatment reducing event risk from 3% to 2%, the researchers noted.
“Multiple factors, in addition to the efficacy of the therapy and the comparator, may directly influence the NNT and relative risk and should be taken into account in their interpretation,” they said in their report.
Dr. Lajoie had no disclosures related to the study. Her coauthors had disclosures related to Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Bayer, and GlaxoSmithKline, among others.
SOURCE: Lajoie AC et al. Chest. 2017 May;153(5):1142-52.
FROM CHEST®