| Literature DB >> 28583149 |
Elliott E Ridgeon1, Rinaldo Bellomo2,3, Scott K Aberegg4, Rob Mac Sweeney5, Rachel S Varughese1, Giovanni Landoni6,7, Paul J Young8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An important limitation of many critical care trial designs is that they hypothesize large, and potentially implausible, reductions in mortality. Interpretation of trial results could be improved by systematic assessment of the plausibility of trial hypotheses; however, such assessment has not been attempted in the field of critical care medicine. The purpose of this study was to determine clinicians' views about prior probabilities and plausible effect sizes for ongoing critical care trials where the primary endpoint is landmark mortality.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trial design; Critical care; Intensive care; Intensive care unit; Randomized clinical trial
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28583149 PMCID: PMC5460326 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1726-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Graphical representation of the method of estimation of the chances that a statistically significant result represents a “true–positive” based on 100 hypothetical trials where there is a 10% chance the hypothesis is correct and experiments are conducted with 90% power at an α of 0.05. In this example, where there is a 10% prior probability that the hypothesis is correct, each box represents a hypothetical trial. The top row of boxes (surrounded by a green line) represent the 10 occasions where the hypothesis is correct; the remaining 90 boxes represent the occasions where the null hypothesis is correct. In an experiment with 90% power, one would expect to correctly identify nine of ten correct hypotheses (the area shaded red). Because the α value is defined as the probability of rejecting the null hypothesis when the null hypothesis is correct, one would also expect to incorrectly reject the null hypothesis on 4.5 of 90 occasions (the area shaded blue). As a result, with a 10% prior probability in an experiment with 90% power, a true-positive result is expected 67% of the time when the P value is 0.05
Fig. 2Trials included in the clinician survey. RCT Randomized controlled trial
Trials included in the clinician surveya
| Trial name | Participants | Intervention | Comparator | Outcome | Baseline mortality (%) | Postulated mortality effectb (%) | Power (%) | Sample Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Confirmatory Phase II/III Study Assessing Efficacy, Immunogenicity and Safety of IC43 Recombinant | Adults requiring ICU ventilation for ≥48 h | Recombinant | Placebo | Day 28 mortality | 27.5 | 10 | 90 | 800 |
| ADjunctive coRticosteroid trEatment iN criticAlly ilL Patients with Septic Shock | Adults who are ventilated with septic shock | Hydrocortisone | Placebo | Day 90 mortality | 33 | 5 | 90 | 3800 |
| Early Spontaneous Breathing in ARDS | Adults ventilated with ARDS | APRV | Volume control ventilation | Day 28 mortality | 35 | 10 | 80 | 700 |
| Non-sedation versus Sedation with a Daily Wake-up Trial in Critically Ill Patients Receiving Mechanical Ventilation | Adults ventilated in ICU | Nonsedation | Daily awakening | Day 90 mortality | 39 | 10 | 80 | 700 |
| Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis in the Intensive Care Unit | Adults with shock, coagulopathy, or receiving RRT or ventilation | Pantoprazole | Placebo | Day 90 mortality | 25 | 5 | 90 | 3350 |
| The Augmented versus Routine Approach to Giving Energy Trial | Ventilated adults expected to require enteral nutrition for ≥2 days in ICU | Nutrition at 1.5 kcal/kg/h | Nutrition at 1.0 kcal/kg/h | Day 90 mortality | 25 | 3.95 | 80 | 4000 |
| The SuDDICU Cluster RCT of Antibiotic Prophylaxis in Critical Illness | Adults ventilated for ≥24 h in the ICU | SDD | Placebo | In-hospital mortality | 25 | 3.5 | 90 | 24,000 |
| Ticagrelor in Severe CAP | Adults with severe CAP requiring ICU admission | Ticagrelor | Placebo | Day 90 mortality | 33 | 11 | 80 | 568 |
| Tranexamic acid for the treatment of gastrointestinal haemorrhage: an international randomised, double-blind placebo-controlled trial | Adults with acute significant GI bleeding | Tranexamic acid | Placebo | Day 28 mortality | 10 | 2.5 | 90 | 8000 |
| Tranexamic acid for the treatment of significant traumatic brain injury: an international, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Traumatic brain injury | Tranexamic acid | Placebo | Day 28 mortality | 20 | 3 | 90 | 10,000 |
Abbreviations: APRV Airway pressure release ventilation, ARDS Acute respiratory distress syndrome, CAP Community-acquired pneumonia, GI Gastrointestinal, ICU Intensive care unit, SDD Selective digestive decontamination, RRT Renal replacement therapy
aThe full description of the participants, intervention, comparator, and outcomes provided in the survey is shown in Appendix 1 in Additional file 2; brief information provides an overview of the included trials
bPostulated mortality effect is the investigator-specified absolute risk reduction in mortality used in sample size calculations
Prior probability estimates and calculated chances of a true positive result for each trial
| Trial name | Prior probability estimatesa (%) | Chance of a true-positiveb (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median estimate (IQR) | Range of estimates | Median calculated chance (IQR) | Range of calculated chances | |
| A Confirmatory Phase II/III Study Assessing Efficacy, Immunogenicity and Safety of IC43 Recombinant | 5 (0.33–20) | 0–82 | 49 (6–82) | 0–99 |
| ADjunctive coRticosteroid trEatment iN criticAlly ilL Patients with Septic Shock | 20 (5–50) | 0–100 | 82 (49–95) | 0–100 |
| Early Spontaneous Breathing in ARDS | 10 (1–25) | 0–100 | 64 (14–84) | 0–100 |
| Non-sedation versus Sedation with a Daily Wake-up Trial in Critically Ill Patients Receiving Mechanical Ventilation | 20 (5–40) | 0–100 | 80 (46–91) | 0–100 |
| Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis in the Intensive Care Unit | 10 (0.030–28.75) | 0–100 | 67 (1–88) | 0–100 |
| The Augmented versus Routine Approach to Giving Energy Trial | 10 (2–40) | 0–90 | 64 (29–91) | 0–99 |
| The SuDDICU Cluster RCT of Antibiotic Prophylaxis in Critical Illness | 25 (10–50) | 0–100 | 86 (67–95) | 0–100 |
| Ticagrelor in Severe CAP | 2.5 (0–10) | 0–100 | 29 (0–64) | 0–100 |
| Tranexamic acid for the treatment of gastrointestinal haemorrhage: an international randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 35 (10–57.5) | 0–100 | 91 (67–96) | 0–100 |
| Tranexamic acid for the treatment of significant traumatic brain injury: an international, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 20 (10–50) | 0–100 | 82 (67–95) | 0–100 |
Abbreviations: APRV Airway pressure release ventilation, ARDS Acute respiratory distress syndrome, CAP Community-acquired pneumonia, GI Gastrointestinal, ICU Intensive care unit, IQR Interquartile range, SDD Selective digestive decontamination, RRT Renal replacement therapy
aPrior probability was defined as the percentage chance, estimated by clinicians, that a trial would demonstrate a mortality effect equal to or greater than that used by the trials investigators in their sample size calculation
bCalculated chances of a true-positive result are based on the prior probabilities shown and assume power (β) specified by the trial investigators and an α of 0.05 using the following calculation: True-positive rate = (prior probability) × β/(1 − prior probability) × α) + (prior probability × β)
Largest effect size considered plausible by clinicians and the corresponding sample size to detect this effect
| Trial name | Effect size (%) | Sample size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median largest absolute mortality reduction considered plausible (IQR, range) | Absolute mortality reduction postulated by trialists | Size required to detect median largest effect size considered plausible | Actual | |
| A Confirmatory Phase II/III Study Assessing Efficacy, Immunogenicity and Safety of IC43 Recombinant | 5 (2–6, 0–23)) | 10 | 3186 | 800 |
| ADjunctive coRticosteroid trEatment iN criticAlly ilL Patients with Septic Shock | 5 (3–10, 0–33) | 5 | 3556 | 3800 |
| Early Spontaneous Breathing in ARDS | 5 (2–10, 0–35) | 10 | 2748 | 700 |
| Non-sedation versus Sedation with a Daily Wake-up Trial in Critically Ill Patients Receiving Mechanical Ventilation | 5 (3–15, 0–39) | 10 | 2904 | 700 |
| Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis in the Intensive Care Unit | 3 (1–5, 0–25) | 5 | 8388 | 3350 |
| The Augmented versus Routine Approach to Giving Energy Trial | 3 (1–5, 0–25) | 3.95 | 6266 | 4000 |
| The SuDDICU Cluster RCT of Antibiotic Prophylaxis in Critical Illness | 5 (3–9, 0–24) | 3.5 | Not calculateda | 24,000 |
| Ticagrelor in Severe CAP | 3 (1–5, 0–33) | 11 | 7522 | 568 |
| Tranexamic acid for the treatment of gastrointestinal haemorrhage: an international randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 3 (2–5, 0–10) | 2.5 | 3624 | 8000 |
| Tranexamic acid for the treatment of significant traumatic brain injury: an international, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 4 (2–5, 0–10) | 3 | 3868 | 10,000 |
Abbreviations: APRV Airway pressure release ventilation, ARDS Acute respiratory distress syndrome, ARR Absolute risk reduction, CAP Community-acquired pneumonia, GI Gastrointestinal, ICU Intensive care unit, IQR Interquartile range, SDD Selective digestive decontamination, RRT Renal replacement therapy
aData required to perform the modified sample size calculation for this cluster trial could not be derived from the survey response data