Competing time-to-event endpoints in cardiology trials - a simulation study to illustrate the importance of an adequate statistical analysis

  • Geraldine Rauch
  • Meinhard Kieser
  • Sandra Ulrich
  • Patrick Doherty
  • Bernhard Rauch
  • Steffen Schneider
  • Thomas Riemer
  • Jochen Senges

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Clinical trials in cardiology commonly consider time-to-event endpoints that are often influenced by competing risks. In the presence of competing risks, standard survival analysis techniques, such as the Kaplan-Meier estimator, can yield seriously biased results. Although methods to account for competing risks are well known in the statistical literature, they are rarely applied in clinical trials.

DESIGN:

Simulation study, to demonstrate the appropriate application and interpretation of the competing risks methodology with respect to time-to-event endpoints.

METHODS:

In this paper, different statistical approaches to account for competing risks are systematically compared, based on a simulation study and using the original data from a cardiology trial.

RESULTS:

Group comparisons in clinical trials that have competing time-to-event endpoints should be based on the cause-specific hazard functions. In contrast, group comparisons based on event rates should be carried out with care, as event rates are directly influenced by competing events.

CONCLUSION:

Ignoring or not fully accounting for competing risks may yield misleading or even erroneous results, which could hinder understanding of survival trends; therefore, it is important that competing risks methodology be routinely incorporated into clinical trial standards.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2047-4873
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.2014
PubMed 22964966