The Progression-Free-Survival Ratio in Molecularly Aided Tumor Trials: A Critical Examination of Current Practice and Suggestions for Alternative Methods

The progression-free-survival ratio is a popular endpoint in oncology trials, which is frequently applied to evaluate the efficacy of molecularly targeted treatments in late-stage patients. Using elementary calculations and simulations, numerous shortcomings of the current methodology are pointed ou...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biometrical journal 2025-02, Vol.67 (1), p.e70028
Hauptverfasser: Edelmann, Dominic, Terzer, Tobias, Horak, Peter, Schlenk, Richard, Benner, Axel
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container_title Biometrical journal
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creator Edelmann, Dominic
Terzer, Tobias
Horak, Peter
Schlenk, Richard
Benner, Axel
description The progression-free-survival ratio is a popular endpoint in oncology trials, which is frequently applied to evaluate the efficacy of molecularly targeted treatments in late-stage patients. Using elementary calculations and simulations, numerous shortcomings of the current methodology are pointed out. As a remedy to these shortcomings, an alternative methodology is proposed, using a marginal Cox model or a marginal accelerated failure time model for clustered time-to-event data. Using comprehensive simulations, it is shown that this methodology outperforms existing methods in settings where the intrapatient correlation is low to moderate. The performance of the model is further demonstrated in a real data example from a molecularly aided tumor trial. Sample size considerations are discussed.
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Biometry - methods
Clinical Trials as Topic - methods
Humans
Models, Statistical
Molecular Targeted Therapy - methods
Neoplasms - mortality
Progression-Free Survival
Proportional Hazards Models
title The Progression-Free-Survival Ratio in Molecularly Aided Tumor Trials: A Critical Examination of Current Practice and Suggestions for Alternative Methods
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