Literature DB >> 32063399

From single-arm studies to externally controlled studies. Methodological considerations and guidelines.

Michel Cucherat1, Silvy Laporte2, Olivier Delaitre3, Jehan-Michel Behier4, Anne d'Andon5, Florence Binlich6, Serge Bureau7, Catherine Cornu8, Cécile Fouret9, Natalie Hoog Labouret10, Bruno Laviolle11, Houda Miadi-Fargier12, Xavier Paoletti13, Matthieu Roustit14, Tabassome Simon15, Nathalie Varoqueaux16, Eric Vicaut17, Jérémie Westerloppe18.   

Abstract

Single-arm studies are sometimes used as pivotal studies but they have methodological limitations which prevent them from obtaining the high level of reliability as for a randomised controlled study which remains the gold standard in the evaluation of new treatments. The objective of this roundtable was to discuss the limitations of these single-arm studies, to analyse available and acceptable solutions in order to propose guidelines for their conduct and assessment. Single-arm studies themselves are intrinsically inappropriate for demonstrating the benefit of a new treatment because it is impossible to infer the benefit from a value obtained under treatment without knowing what it would have been in the absence of the new treatment. The implication is that comparison with other data is necessary. However this comparison has limitations due to (1) the post hoc choice of the reference used for comparison, (2) the confusion bias for which an adjustment approach is imperative and, (3) the other biases, measure and attrition among others. When these limitations are taken into account this should, first and foremost, lead to the conduct of externally controlled trials instead of single-arm trials as is proposed by the latest version of ICH E10. Moreover, the external control must be formalised in the study protocol with a priori selection of both the reference control and the formal method of comparison: test in relation to a standard, adjustment on individual data, a synthetic control group or matching-adjusted indirect comparisons (MAIC). Lastly, externally controlled studies must be restricted to situations where randomisation is infeasible. To be acceptable, these studies must be able to guarantee freedom from residual confusion bias, which is only truly acceptable if the observed effect is dramatic and the usual course of the disease is highly predicable.
Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Control group; External control study; Indirect comparison; Matching-adjusted indirect comparisons; Non-comparative; Single-arm study

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 32063399     DOI: 10.1016/j.therap.2019.11.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Therapie        ISSN: 0040-5957            Impact factor:   2.070


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