| Literature DB >> 33874894 |
Anthony D Bai1,2, Adam S Komorowski3, Carson K L Lo4, Pranav Tandon5, Xena X Li4,3, Vaibhav Mokashi4, Anna Cvetkovic4, Aidan Findlater4, Laurel Liang6, George Tomlinson7,8, Mark Loeb4, Dominik Mertz4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In non-inferiority trials, there is a concern that intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis, by including participants who did not receive the planned interventions, may bias towards making the treatment and control arms look similar and lead to mistaken claims of non-inferiority. In contrast, per protocol (PP) analysis is viewed as less likely to make this mistake and therefore preferable in non-inferiority trials. In a systematic review of antibiotic non-inferiority trials, we compared ITT and PP analyses to determine which analysis was more conservative.Entities:
Keywords: Intention-to-treat; Non-inferiority trials; Per protocol; Systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33874894 PMCID: PMC8054385 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-021-01260-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Fig. 1Orientation and interpretation of confidence interval relative to non-inferiority margin. CI = confidence interval
Fig. 2Flow diagram of study selection process
Study characteristics
| All comparisons within studies | |
|---|---|
| Primary analysis population as per author | |
| ITT only | 42 (25.6%) |
| PP only | 45 (27.4%) |
| ITT and PP | 55 (33.5%) |
| Not specified | 22 (13.4%) |
| Sample size per group in the ITT population, Median (IQR) | 221.5 (129.5, 326.0) |
| Proportion of treatment arm in the ITT population that was included in the PP population, Median (IQR) | 0.86 (0.79, 0.93) |
| Proportion of control arm in the ITT population that was included in the PP population, Median (IQR) | 0.87 (0.77, 0.92) |
| Definition of ITT | |
| Based on assignment alone | 54 (32.9%) |
| Use of drug at least once | 95 (57.9%) |
| Other exclusion criteria used | 34 (20.7%) |
| PP population clearly defined | 138 (84.2%) |
| Definition of PP population | |
| Exclusion based on concomitant therapy | 96 (58.5%) |
| Exclusion based on incompliance | 123 (75.0%) |
| Exclusion based on lost to follow-up | 118 (72.0%) |
| Exclusion based on withdrawn from study due to other reasons | 29 (17.7%) |
| Exclusion for other reasons | 28 (17.1%) |
| Description of methods for handling missing data | 64 (39.0%) |
| Missing data methods used | |
| Missing data as failure | 58 (35.4%) |
| Tipping point analysisa | 3 (1.8%) |
| Multiple imputation | 4 (2.4%) |
| Last outcome carried forward | 2 (1.2%) |
| CI reported | |
| 2-sided 95% or 1-sided 97.5% CIb | 142 (86.6%) |
CI Confidence interval, IQR Interquartile range, ITT Intention-to-treat, PP Per-protocol
aTipping point analysis assumes that all missing patients in the treatment group were failures and all missing patients in the control group were successes
bOther CIs include 1-sided 95% CI (N = 4), 2-sided 90% (N = 9), 2-sided 97.5% (N = 4). Five studies did not report any CI
Risk of bias assessment
| All comparisons within studies ( | |
|---|---|
| Randomization | |
| High risk | 3 (1.8%) |
| Low risk | 110 (67.1%) |
| Unclear | 51 (31.1%) |
| Allocation concealment | |
| High risk | 3 (1.8%) |
| Low risk | 74 (45.1%) |
| Unclear | 87 (53.1%) |
| Performance bias | |
| High risk | 75 (45.7%) |
| Low risk | 84 (51.2%) |
| Unclear | 5 (3.1%) |
| Detection bias | |
| High risk | 58 (35.4%) |
| Low risk | 100 (61.0%) |
| Unclear | 6 (3.7%) |
| Attrition bias | |
| High risk | 51 (31.1%) |
| Low risk | 108 (65.9%) |
| Unclear | 5 (3.1%) |
| Reporting bias | |
| High risk | 28 (17.1%) |
| Low risk | 136 (82.9%) |
| Unclear | 0 (0%) |
Comparison of ITT to PP outcomes in terms of ARR
| PP Median (IQR) | ITT Median (IQR) | Difference ITT – PP Median (IQR) | Wilcoxon signed-rank test | PP analysis is more conservative N (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Point estimate | −0.2 (−2.6, 2.2) | 0.04 (− 2.6, 2.6) | − 0.01 (− 1.6, 1.9) | 0.7025 | 81 (49.4%) |
| CI width | 12.4 (9.7, 16.6) | 13.3 (11.2, 17.5) | 0.9 (−0.4, 2.0) | < 0.0001 | 58 (35.4%) |
| Lower CI limit | −6.9 (− 10.0, −4.0) | −7.5 (− 10.3, −4.7) | −0.5 (− 1.8, 1.2) | 0.0402 | 72 (43.9%) |
A positive value for the difference in CI width indicates less precise estimation of the ARR with ITT analysis. A negative difference for the lower CI limit signifies that the PP lower CI limit lies above the ITT CI limit, so ITT analysis has a more conservative result
ARR Absolute risk reduction, CI Confidence interval, IQR Interquartile range, ITT Intention-to-treat, PP Per-protocol
Fig. 3Graphical comparison of ITT versus PP point estimate. ARR = absolute risk reduction; ITT = intention-to-treat; PP = per protocol. The size of the points on the graph is proportional to the sample size of the ITT population. A diagonal line is drawn at y = x, so ITT analysis is more conservative for points above the line and PP analysis is more conservative for points below the line
Fig. 4Graphical comparison of ITT versus PP lower CI limit. ARR = absolute risk reduction; CI = confidence interval; ITT = intention-to-treat; PP = per protocol. The size of the points on the graph is proportional to the sample size of the ITT population. A diagonal line is drawn at y = x, so ITT analysis is more conservative for points above the line and PP analysis is more conservative for points below the line. Three outliers were not included in this graph: 1) ITT lower CI of − 51.3% and PP lower CI of − 32.5%. 2) ITT lower CI of − 30.8% and PP lower CI of − 18.4%. 3) ITT lower CI of 15.7% and PP lower CI of 15.4%
Univariate linear regression of difference between ITT lower CI and PP lower CI on study characteristics and risk for bias
| Predictors | Co-efficient (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| ITT based on assignment alone | −0.21 (− 1.60 to 1.18) | 0.7654 |
| ITT based on use of drug at least once | 0.01 (−1.31 to 1.34) | 0.9823 |
| PP exclusion based on concomitant therapy | −1.35 (− 2.66 to −0.04) | 0.0439 |
| PP exclusion based on incompliance | 0.55 (−0.96 to 2.05) | 0.4764 |
| PP exclusion based on lost to follow-up | 0.41 (−1.04 to 1.87) | 0.5757 |
| Proportion of treatment arm in the ITT population that was included in the PP population per every 10% | 0.70 (0.09 to 1.32) | 0.0247 |
| Proportion of control arm in the ITT population that was included in the PP population per every 10% | −0.90 (−1.42 to −3.72) | 0.0009 |
| Missing data as failure | −0.68 (− 2.05 to 0.68) | 0.3263 |
| Tipping point analysis | − 2.66 (−7.53 to 2.21) | 0.2818 |
| Multiple imputation | −1.49 (−5.72 to 2.75) | 0.4892 |
| Low risk for allocation concealment bias | −0.87 (−2.17 to 0.44) | 0.1936 |
| Low risk for performance bias | −1.69 (−2.97 to −0.40) | 0.0104 |
| Low risk for detection bias | −1.21 (−2.54 to 0.11) | 0.0728 |
| Low risk for attrition bias | −0.56 (−1.93 to 0.82) | 0.4264 |
The dependent variable in the model is ITT lower CI limit minus PP lower CI limit. Therefore, a negative co-efficient is associated with a smaller ITT lower CI limit, so the ITT analysis is more conservative than PP analysis. Conversely, a positive co-efficient is associated with a smaller PP lower CI limit, so the PP analysis is more conservative than the ITT analysis
CI confidence interval, ITT Intention-to-treat, PP Per-protocol
Multivariable linear regression of difference between ITT lower CI and PP lower CI on study characteristics and risk for bias
| Predictors | Co-efficient (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| PP exclusion based on concomitant therapy | −0.81 (− 1.93 to 0.31) | 0.1558 |
| Low risk for allocation concealment bias | −0.74 (− 1.82 to 0.35) | 0.1810 |
| Low risk for performance bias | −1.35 (− 2.94 to 0.24) | 0.0960 |
| Low risk for detection bias | 0.70 (−0.97 to 2.37) | 0.4076 |
| Proportion of treatment arm in the ITT population that was included in the PP population per every 10% | 2.89 (2.13 to 3.65) | < 0.0001 |
| Proportion of control arm in the ITT population that was included in the PP population per every 10% | −2.73 (−3.37 to − 2.09) | < 0.0001 |
The dependent variable in the model is ITT lower CI limit minus PP lower CI limit. Therefore, a negative co-efficient is associated with a smaller ITT lower CI limit, so the ITT analysis is more conservative than PP analysis. Conversely, a positive co-efficient is associated with a smaller PP lower CI limit, so the PP analysis is more conservative than the ITT analysis
CI Confidence interval, ITT Intention-to-treat, PP Per-protocol