| Literature DB >> 19545379 |
Nicole B Gabler1, Naihua Duan, Diana Liao, Joann G Elmore, Theodore G Ganiats, Richard L Kravitz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Some patients will experience more or less benefit from treatment than the averages reported from clinical trials; such variation in therapeutic outcome is termed heterogeneity of treatment effects (HTE). Identifying HTE is necessary to individualize treatment. The degree to which heterogeneity is sought and analyzed correctly in the general medical literature is unknown. We undertook this literature sample to track the use of HTE analyses over time, examine the appropriateness of the statistical methods used, and explore the predictors of such analyses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19545379 PMCID: PMC2706823 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-10-43
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Article selection for systemic review of heterogeneity of treatment effect in RCTs published in five general medical journals.
Characteristics of included articles (n = 303) and RCTs described in these articles (n = 319)*
| Journal of publication | ||
| Annals | 30 (10) | 30 (9) |
| BMJ | 43 (14) | 47 (15) |
| JAMA | 45 (15) | 50 (16) |
| Lancet | 97 (32) | 101 (32) |
| NEJM | 88 (29) | 91 (29) |
| Year of publication | ||
| 1994 | 86 (28) | 91 (29) |
| 1999 | 102 (34) | 106 (33) |
| 2004 | 115 (38) | 122 (38) |
| Medical condition under study | ||
| Cardiovascular | 69 (23) | 74 (23) |
| Infectious Disease | 62 (20) | 70 (22) |
| Cancer | 41 (14) | 42 (13) |
| Psychiatry/Neurology | 25 (8) | 25 (8) |
| Other | 106 (35) | 108 (34) |
| First author's study region | ||
| North America | 115 (38) | 121 (38) |
| Other | 188 (62) | 198 (62) |
| Study design | ||
| Parallel | - | 304 (95) |
| Crossover | - | 15 (5) |
| Analysis reported | ||
| HTE analysis | - | 92 (29) |
| Subgroup without statistical comparison | - | 88 (28) |
| None | - | 139 (44) |
| Sample size | 262 (101 – 708) | |
| - | [6–41,000] | |
Abbreviations: RCTs, randomized controlled trials; BMJ, British Medical Journal; JAMA, Journal of the American Medical Association; NEJM, New England Journal of Medicine; HTE, heterogeneity of treatment effects.
*Discrete data are expressed as No. (%); continuous values are presented as median (inter-quartile range) [range].
HTE reporting by study characteristics (n = 319 RCTs in 303 articles)
| Journal of publication | † | † | |
| Annals | 30 | 11 (37) | 16 (53) |
| BMJ | 47 | 9 (19) | 18 (38) |
| JAMA | 50 | 21 (42) | 33 (66) |
| Lancet | 101 | 21 (21) | 53 (53) |
| NEJM | 91 | 30 (33) | 60 (66) |
| Year of publication | |||
| 1994 | 91 | 20 (22) | 47 (52) |
| 1999 | 106 | 30 (28) | 62 (58) |
| 2004 | 122 | 42 (34) | 71 (58) |
| Medical condition under study | ‡ | ||
| Cardiovascular | 74 | 21 (28) | 43 (58) |
| Infectious disease | 70 | 25 (36) | 48 (69) |
| Cancer | 42 | 15 (36) | 30 (71) |
| Psychiatry/Neurology | 25 | 7 (28) | 12 (48) |
| Other | 108 | 24 (22) | 47 (44) |
| First author's study region | ‡ | ‡ | |
| North America | 121 | 47 (39) | 80 (66) |
| Other | 198 | 45 (23) | 100 (51) |
| Study design | ∥ | ||
| Parallel | 304 | 89 (29) | 177 (58) |
| Crossover | 15 | 3 (20) | 3 (20) |
| Sample size | ** | ** | |
| Quintile 1 (median = 37) | 64 | 9 (14) | 18 (28) |
| Quintile 2 (median = 124) | 64 | 7 (11) | 29 (45) |
| Quintile 3 (median = 263) | 64 | 22 (34) | 45 (70) |
| Quintile 4 (median = 549) | 64 | 21 (33) | 40 (63) |
| Quintile 5 (median = 1560) | 63 | 33 (52) | 48 (76) |
Abbreviations: HTE, heterogeneity of treatment effects; RCTs, randomized controlled trials; BMJ, British Medical Journal; JAMA, Journal of the American Medical Association; NEJM, New England Journal of Medicine.
†p < 0.05 by Pearson Chi-square test
‡p < 0.01 by Pearson Chi-square test
§p < 0.05 by Fisher's exact test
∥p < 0.01 by Fisher's exact test
¶p < 0.05 by Mantel-Hantzel test for trend
**p < 0.0001 by Mantel-Hantzel test for trend
Logistic regression results examining predictors of HTE or subgroup analysis
| Journal of publication | † |
| BMJ | 1.00 [reference] |
| Annals | 4.22 (1.18–15.08) |
| JAMA | 4.40 (1.43–13.53) |
| Lancet | 1.44 (0.55–3.77) |
| NEJM | 2.36 (0.85–6.56) |
| Year of publication | |
| 2004 | 1.00 [reference] |
| 1999 | 0.88 (0.47–1.66) |
| 1994 | 0.83 (0.41–1.67) |
| Medical condition under study | |
| Other | 1.00 [reference] |
| Cardiovascular | 1.07 (0.50–2.32) |
| Infectious disease | 1.38 (0.66–2.89) |
| Cancer | 1.13 (0.47–2.71) |
| Psychiatry/Neurology | 2.85 (0.91–8.92) |
| First author's study region | |
| Other | 1.00 [reference] |
| North America | 1.23 (0.67–2.29) |
| Sample size | ‡ |
| Quintile 1 (median = 37) | 1.00 [reference] |
| Quintile 2 (median = 124) | 0.72 (0.24–2.14) |
| Quintile 3 (median = 263) | 4.17 (1.62–10.74) |
| Quintile 4 (median = 549) | 3.08 (1.20–7.91) |
| Quintile 5 (median = 1560) | 7.55 (2.95–19.33) |
Abbreviations: HTE, heterogeneity of treatment effects; OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; BMJ, British Medical Journal; JAMA, Journal of the American Medical Association; NEJM, New England Journal of Medicine
*Adjusted for all other variables in the model
†Significant at p < 0.05 for a combined Wald Chi-square test
‡Significant at p < 0.001 for a combined Wald Chi-square test
Figure 2Guidelines for Journal Editors and Authors for Reporting and Interpreting HTE Analyses.