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A novel endpoint for exacerbations in asthma to accelerate clinical development : A post-hoc analysis of randomised controlled trials

Fuhlbrigge, Anne L. ; Bengtsson, Thomas ; Peterson, Stefan ; Jauhiainen, Alexandra ; Eriksson, Göran LU ; Da Silva, Carla A. ; Johnson, Anthony ; Sethi, Tariq ; Locantore, Nicholas and Tal-Singer, Ruth , et al. (2017) In The Lancet Respiratory Medicine 5(7). p.577-590
Abstract

Background: Occurrence of severe asthma exacerbations are the cornerstone of the evaluation of asthma management, but severe asthma exacerbations are rare events. Therefore, trials that assess drug efficacy on exacerbations are done late in clinical development programmes. We aimed to establish an endpoint capturing clinically relevant deteriorations (diary events) that, when combined with severe exacerbations, create a composite outcome (CompEx). CompEx needs to strongly mirror results seen with the severe exacerbation-validated outcome, to allow the design of clinical trials of shorter duration and that include fewer patients than trials assessing severe exacerbations. Methods: Data from 12 asthma trials of 6 months or 12 months... (More)

Background: Occurrence of severe asthma exacerbations are the cornerstone of the evaluation of asthma management, but severe asthma exacerbations are rare events. Therefore, trials that assess drug efficacy on exacerbations are done late in clinical development programmes. We aimed to establish an endpoint capturing clinically relevant deteriorations (diary events) that, when combined with severe exacerbations, create a composite outcome (CompEx). CompEx needs to strongly mirror results seen with the severe exacerbation-validated outcome, to allow the design of clinical trials of shorter duration and that include fewer patients than trials assessing severe exacerbations. Methods: Data from 12 asthma trials of 6 months or 12 months duration and, with standardised collection of exacerbations and diary card variables, were used to construct and test CompEx. The study populations had a mean age of 35-53 years, 59-69% were female, and had a mean FEV1 percentage of predicted normal of 63-84%. With data from five trials, we established a series of diary events based on peak expiratory flow (P), reliever use (R), symptoms (S), awakenings (A), and threshold values for change from baseline and slopes to assess trends. For the development phase, we evaluated different variable combinations and deterioration criteria to select the most robust algorithm to define a diary event for the composite outcome. We defined a composite outcome, CompEx, as first occurrence of a diary event or a severe exacerbation. We assessed the performance of CompEx in seven trials by comparing the event frequency, treatment effect (hazard ratio; HR), and the sample size needed for future trials for the CompEx versus episodes of severe exacerbations. Findings: CompEx (based on PRS) was the algorithm that best fulfilled our two-set criteria. When censored at 3 months, CompEx resulted in 2·8 times more events than severe exacerbations, and while preserving the treatment effect observed on severe exacerbations (CompEx over severe exacerbation average HR 1·01). The increased number of events, together with the sustained treatment effect, resulted in a large net gain in power, with a 67% mean reduction in the number of patients required in a drug trial for severe exacerbations. In six of seven comparisons tested, CompEx reduced the sample size needed by at least 50%. Validation of independent test populations confirmed the ability of CompEx to increase event frequencies, preserve treatment effect, and reduce the number of patients needed. Interpretation: CompEx is a composite outcome for evaluation of new asthma therapies. CompEx allows design of shorter trials that require fewer patients than studies of severe exacerbations, while preserving the ability to show a treatment effect compared with severe exacerbations. Funding: AstraZeneca.

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Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
The Lancet Respiratory Medicine
volume
5
issue
7
pages
577 - 590
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85020109137
  • wos:000404047900022
ISSN
2213-2600
DOI
10.1016/S2213-2600(17)30218-7
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d5d6f452-688a-44a6-924f-68444c9fa112
date added to LUP
2017-06-26 11:51:01
date last changed
2024-04-14 13:52:20
@article{d5d6f452-688a-44a6-924f-68444c9fa112,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Occurrence of severe asthma exacerbations are the cornerstone of the evaluation of asthma management, but severe asthma exacerbations are rare events. Therefore, trials that assess drug efficacy on exacerbations are done late in clinical development programmes. We aimed to establish an endpoint capturing clinically relevant deteriorations (diary events) that, when combined with severe exacerbations, create a composite outcome (CompEx). CompEx needs to strongly mirror results seen with the severe exacerbation-validated outcome, to allow the design of clinical trials of shorter duration and that include fewer patients than trials assessing severe exacerbations. Methods: Data from 12 asthma trials of 6 months or 12 months duration and, with standardised collection of exacerbations and diary card variables, were used to construct and test CompEx. The study populations had a mean age of 35-53 years, 59-69% were female, and had a mean FEV<sub>1</sub> percentage of predicted normal of 63-84%. With data from five trials, we established a series of diary events based on peak expiratory flow (P), reliever use (R), symptoms (S), awakenings (A), and threshold values for change from baseline and slopes to assess trends. For the development phase, we evaluated different variable combinations and deterioration criteria to select the most robust algorithm to define a diary event for the composite outcome. We defined a composite outcome, CompEx, as first occurrence of a diary event or a severe exacerbation. We assessed the performance of CompEx in seven trials by comparing the event frequency, treatment effect (hazard ratio; HR), and the sample size needed for future trials for the CompEx versus episodes of severe exacerbations. Findings: CompEx (based on PRS) was the algorithm that best fulfilled our two-set criteria. When censored at 3 months, CompEx resulted in 2·8 times more events than severe exacerbations, and while preserving the treatment effect observed on severe exacerbations (CompEx over severe exacerbation average HR 1·01). The increased number of events, together with the sustained treatment effect, resulted in a large net gain in power, with a 67% mean reduction in the number of patients required in a drug trial for severe exacerbations. In six of seven comparisons tested, CompEx reduced the sample size needed by at least 50%. Validation of independent test populations confirmed the ability of CompEx to increase event frequencies, preserve treatment effect, and reduce the number of patients needed. Interpretation: CompEx is a composite outcome for evaluation of new asthma therapies. CompEx allows design of shorter trials that require fewer patients than studies of severe exacerbations, while preserving the ability to show a treatment effect compared with severe exacerbations. Funding: AstraZeneca.</p>}},
  author       = {{Fuhlbrigge, Anne L. and Bengtsson, Thomas and Peterson, Stefan and Jauhiainen, Alexandra and Eriksson, Göran and Da Silva, Carla A. and Johnson, Anthony and Sethi, Tariq and Locantore, Nicholas and Tal-Singer, Ruth and Fagerås, Malin}},
  issn         = {{2213-2600}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{7}},
  pages        = {{577--590}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{The Lancet Respiratory Medicine}},
  title        = {{A novel endpoint for exacerbations in asthma to accelerate clinical development : A post-hoc analysis of randomised controlled trials}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2213-2600(17)30218-7}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/S2213-2600(17)30218-7}},
  volume       = {{5}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}