Author: Colantuoni, Elizabeth; Li, Ximin; Hashem, Mohamed D; Girard, Timothy D; Scharfstein, Daniel O; Needham, Dale M
Title: A structured methodology review showed analyses of functional outcomes are frequently limited to "survivors only" in trials enrolling patients at high risk of death. Cord-id: d6lhxtjm Document date: 2021_4_7
ID: d6lhxtjm
Snippet: OBJECTIVE This structured methodology review evaluated statistical approaches used in RCTs enrolling patients at high risk of death and makes recommendations for reporting future RCTs. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING Using PubMed, we searched for RCTs published in five general medicine journals from January 2014 to August 2019 wherein mortality was ≥10% in at least one randomized group. We abstracted primary and secondary outcomes, statistical analysis methods, and patient samples evaluated (all rand
Document: OBJECTIVE This structured methodology review evaluated statistical approaches used in RCTs enrolling patients at high risk of death and makes recommendations for reporting future RCTs. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING Using PubMed, we searched for RCTs published in five general medicine journals from January 2014 to August 2019 wherein mortality was ≥10% in at least one randomized group. We abstracted primary and secondary outcomes, statistical analysis methods, and patient samples evaluated (all randomized patients vs. "survivors only"). RESULTS Of 1947 RCTs identified, 434 met eligibility criteria. Of the eligible RCTs, 91 (21%) and 351 (81%) had a primary or secondary functional outcome, respectively, of which 36 (40%) and 263 (75%) evaluated treatment effects among "survivors only". In RCTs that analyzed all randomized patients, the most common methods included use of ordinal outcomes (e.g., modified Rankin Scale) or creating composite outcomes (primary: 41 of 91 [45%]; secondary: 57 of 351 [16%]). CONCLUSION In RCTs enrolling patients at high risk of death, statistical analyses of functional outcomes are frequently conducted among "survivors only," for which conclusions might be misleading. Given the growing number of RCTs conducted among patients hospitalized with COVID-19 and other critical illnesses, standards for reporting should be created.
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