4.5 Article

Improving precision and power in randomized trials for COVID-19 treatments using covariate adjustment, for binary, ordinal, and time-to-event outcomes

期刊

BIOMETRICS
卷 77, 期 4, 页码 1467-1481

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/biom.13377

关键词

covariate adjustment; COVID-19; ordinal outcomes; randomized trial; survival analysis

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [DP2-LM013340]
  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration [U01FD005942]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Time is crucial in assessing potential drugs for COVID-19. Despite recommendations from regulatory agencies, covariate adjustment is underutilized in trials. Simulation studies show that using covariate adjustment can significantly reduce sample size and improve efficiency in COVID-19 trials.
Time is of the essence in evaluating potential drugs and biologics for the treatment and prevention of COVID-19. There are currently 876 randomized clinical trials (phase 2 and 3) of treatments for COVID-19 registered on clinicaltrials.gov. Covariate adjustment is a statistical analysis method with potential to improve precision and reduce the required sample size for a substantial number of these trials. Though covariate adjustment is recommended by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency, it is underutilized, especially for the types of outcomes (binary, ordinal, and time-to-event) that are common in COVID-19 trials. To demonstrate the potential value added by covariate adjustment in this context, we simulated two-arm, randomized trials comparing a hypothetical COVID-19 treatment versus standard of care, where the primary outcome is binary, ordinal, or time-to-event. Our simulated distributions are derived from two sources: longitudinal data on over 500 patients hospitalized at Weill Cornell Medicine New York Presbyterian Hospital and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention preliminary description of 2449 cases. In simulated trials with sample sizes ranging from 100 to 1000 participants, we found substantial precision gains from using covariate adjustment-equivalent to 4-18% reductions in the required sample size to achieve a desired power. This was the case for a variety of estimands (targets of inference). From these simulations, we conclude that covariate adjustment is a low-risk, high-reward approach to streamlining COVID-19 treatment trials. We provide anRpackage and practical recommendations for implementation.

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