4.5 Article

Making Statistical Sense of the Molnupiravir MOVe-OUT Clinical Trial

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE
Volume 106, Issue 5, Pages 1301-1304

Publisher

AMER SOC TROP MED & HYGIENE
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.21-1339

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This article discusses the issues and flaws in a clinical trial of an oral therapeutic drug called molnupiravir, and suggests the need for independent external trials to determine the efficacy of this drug.
Oral therapies for the early treatment of COVID-19 may prevent disease progression and health system overcrowding. A new oral therapeutic named molnupiravir has been promoted as providing an approximately 50% reduction in death or the need for hospitalization. The clinical trial evaluating this drug was stopped early at the recommendation of the Data Safety and Monitoring Board after approximately 50% of the sample had been recruited. At the point of discontinuing the trial, approximately 90% of the planned sample had been recruited and had available follow-up data accessible. We discuss issues about the study conduct, analysis, and interpretation, including 1) the authors and sponsors presented the interim analysis as the primary analysis; 2) communication between sponsors and the Data Safety and Monitoring Board was insufficient; 3) the treatment effects reverse when examining only the post-interim analysis population, and are substantially attenuated when examining the full data; 4) the choice of primary analysis is incorrect; 5) analysis of lost-to-follow-up patients favors the study drug; and 6) other known molnupiravir trials were not presented in the primary study findings. As a result of methodological and statistical concerns, it seems that external trials, separate from those supported by the sponsoring company, are required to determine the utility of this drug.

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