BACKGROUND: Our objective was to evaluate the performance of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Responder Endpoint for clinical trials in IBS-C, using data from two large Phase 3 clinical trials of linaclotide. The FDA interim endpoint requires that, for 50% of trial weeks, patients report ≥30% decrease in Abdominal Pain at its worst and (in the same week) an increase in Complete Spontaneous Bowel Movements (CSBMs) of ≥1 from baseline. METHODS: Anchor-based methodology was used to estimate thresholds of clinically meaningful change using symptom-specific patient rating of change questions (PRCQs) and symptom severity questions. The diagnostic accuracy of the FDA Responder Endpoint was assessed using sensitivity/specificity-based methods. KEY RESULTS: Using anchor-based methods, the estimates of the clinically meaningful improvement thresholds for Abdominal Pain ranged from 25.9% to 32.4% and thresholds for increase in weekly CSBM rate ranged from 1.4 to 1.6 CSBMs per week. Compared with the symptom-specific PRCQs for patient rating of relief, the FDA Responder Endpoint has a sensitivity of 60.7%, a specificity of 93.5%, and an accuracy of 82.0%. Changing the number of weeks required to be a responder or the percentage improvement in the Abdominal Pain criteria did not result in notable improvement in the accuracy of the FDA Responder Endpoint. CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES: The FDA Responder Endpoint for IBS-C clinical trials represents clinically meaningful improvements in IBS-C symptoms for patients with excellent specificity and reasonable sensitivity.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Our objective was to evaluate the performance of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Responder Endpoint for clinical trials in IBS-C, using data from two large Phase 3 clinical trials of linaclotide. The FDA interim endpoint requires that, for 50% of trial weeks, patients report ≥30% decrease in Abdominal Pain at its worst and (in the same week) an increase in Complete Spontaneous Bowel Movements (CSBMs) of ≥1 from baseline. METHODS: Anchor-based methodology was used to estimate thresholds of clinically meaningful change using symptom-specific patient rating of change questions (PRCQs) and symptom severity questions. The diagnostic accuracy of the FDA Responder Endpoint was assessed using sensitivity/specificity-based methods. KEY RESULTS: Using anchor-based methods, the estimates of the clinically meaningful improvement thresholds for Abdominal Pain ranged from 25.9% to 32.4% and thresholds for increase in weekly CSBM rate ranged from 1.4 to 1.6 CSBMs per week. Compared with the symptom-specific PRCQs for patient rating of relief, the FDA Responder Endpoint has a sensitivity of 60.7%, a specificity of 93.5%, and an accuracy of 82.0%. Changing the number of weeks required to be a responder or the percentage improvement in the Abdominal Pain criteria did not result in notable improvement in the accuracy of the FDA Responder Endpoint. CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES: The FDA Responder Endpoint for IBS-C clinical trials represents clinically meaningful improvements in IBS-C symptoms for patients with excellent specificity and reasonable sensitivity.
Authors: Daniel A Leffler; Ciaran P Kelly; Peter H R Green; Richard N Fedorak; Anthony DiMarino; Wendy Perrow; Henrik Rasmussen; Chao Wang; Premysl Bercik; Natalie M Bachir; Joseph A Murray Journal: Gastroenterology Date: 2015-02-13 Impact factor: 22.682
Authors: Geoffrey C Wall; Ginelle A Bryant; Michelle M Bottenberg; Erik D Maki; Andrew R Miesner Journal: World J Gastroenterol Date: 2014-07-21 Impact factor: 5.742
Authors: B E Lacy; A J Lembo; J E Macdougall; S J Shiff; C B Kurtz; M G Currie; J M Johnston Journal: Neurogastroenterol Motil Date: 2013-12-30 Impact factor: 3.598
Authors: Judy Nee; Katherine Salley; Andrew G Ludwig; Thomas Sommers; Sarah Ballou; Eve Takazawa; Sarah Duehren; Prashant Singh; Johanna Iturrino; Jesse Katon; Ha-Neul Lee; Vikram Rangan; Anthony J Lembo Journal: Clin Transl Gastroenterol Date: 2019-12 Impact factor: 4.488
Authors: Joshua Z Goldenberg; Matthew Brignall; Michelle Hamilton; Jennifer Beardsley; Richard D Batson; Jason Hawrelak; Brad Lichtenstein; Bradley C Johnston Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2019-11-12