Outcome measures in clinical trials of treatments for acute severe haemorrhage

被引:24
作者
Brenner, Amy [1 ]
Arribas, Monica [1 ]
Cuzick, Jack [2 ]
Jairath, Vipul [3 ]
Stanworth, Simon [4 ,5 ,6 ,7 ]
Ker, Katharine [1 ]
Shakur-Still, Haleema [1 ]
Roberts, Ian [1 ]
机构
[1] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Populat Hlth, Clin Trials Unit, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England
[2] Queen Mary Univ London, Wolfson Inst Prevent Med, Ctr Canc Prevent, London EC1M 6BQ, England
[3] Western Univ, Univ Hosp, Div Gastroenterol, Dept Med, London, ON, Canada
[4] NHS Blood & Transplant, Transfus Med, Oxford, England
[5] Oxford Univ Hosp NHS Fdn Trust, Dept Haematol, Oxford, England
[6] Univ Oxford, Radcliffe Dept Med, Oxford, England
[7] Oxford BRC Haematol Theme, Oxford, England
基金
英国惠康基金; 比尔及梅琳达.盖茨基金会;
关键词
Blood transfusion; Clinical trial; Haemorrhage; Haemostasis; Mortality; Outcome measure; Trial methodology; RANDOMIZED-TRIALS; TRANEXAMIC ACID; DEATH; MANAGEMENT; TIME;
D O I
10.1186/s13063-018-2900-4
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Background: Acute severe haemorrhage is a common complication of injury, childbirth, surgery, gastrointestinal pathologies and other medical conditions. Bleeding is a major cause of death, but patients also die from non-bleeding causes, the frequency of which varies by the site of haemorrhage and between populations. Because patients can bleed to death within hours, established interventions inevitably take priority over randomisation into a trial. These circumstances raise challenges in selecting appropriate outcome measures for clinical trials of haemostatic interventions. Main body: We use data from three large randomised controlled trials in acute severe haemorrhage (CRASH-2, WOMAN and HALT-IT) to explore the strengths and limitations of outcome measures commonly used in trials of haemostatic treatments, including all-cause and cause-specific mortality, blood transfusion and surgical interventions. Many deaths following acute severe haemorrhage are due to patient comorbidities or complications rather than bleeding. If non-bleeding deaths are unaffected by a haemostatic intervention, even large trials will have low power to detect an effect on all-cause mortality. Due to the dilution from deaths unaffected or reduced by the trial treatment, all-cause mortality can also obscure important harmful effects. Additionally, because the relative contributions of different causes of death vary within and between patient populations, all-cause mortality is not generalisable. Different causes of death occur at different time intervals from bleeding onset, with bleeding deaths generally occurring early. Time-specific mortality can therefore be used as a proxy for cause in un-blinded trials where bias is a concern or in situations where cause of death cannot be assessed. Urgent treatment is critical, and so post-randomisation blood transfusion and surgery are often planned before or at the time of randomisation and therefore cannot be influenced by the trial treatment. Conclusions: All-cause mortality has low power, lacks generalisability and can obscure harmful effects. Cause-specific mortality, such as death due to bleeding or thrombosis, avoids these drawbacks. In certain scenarios, time-specific mortality can be used as a proxy for cause-specific mortality. Blood transfusion and surgical procedures have limited utility as outcome measures in trials of haemostatic treatments.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   Traumatic Brain Injury Pathophysiology and Treatments: Early, Intermediate, and Late Phases Post-Injury [J].
Algattas, Hanna ;
Huang, Jason H. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2014, 15 (01) :309-341
[2]  
[Anonymous], COCHRANE DATABASE SY
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2014, COCHRANE DB SYST REV, DOI DOI 10.1002/14651858.CD006640.PUB3
[4]   Principles and Pitfalls: a Guide to Death Certification [J].
Brooks, Erin G. ;
Reed, Kurt D. .
CLINICAL MEDICINE & RESEARCH, 2015, 13 (02) :74-82
[5]   Early hemorrhage growth in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage [J].
Brott, T ;
Broderick, J ;
Kothari, R ;
Barsan, W ;
Tomsick, T ;
Sauerbeck, L ;
Spilker, J ;
Duldner, J ;
Khoury, J .
STROKE, 1997, 28 (01) :1-5
[6]   The acute management of trauma hemorrhage: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials [J].
Curry, Nicola ;
Hopewell, Sally ;
Doree, Carolyn ;
Hyde, Chris ;
Brohi, Karim ;
Stanworth, Simon .
CRITICAL CARE, 2011, 15 (02)
[7]   Primary endpoints for randomised trials of cancer therapy [J].
Cuzick, Jack .
LANCET, 2008, 371 (9631) :2156-2158
[8]   SAMPLE-SIZE FOR BEGINNERS [J].
FLOREY, CD .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1993, 306 (6886) :1181-1184
[9]   Portal Hypertensive Bleeding in Cirrhosis: Risk Stratification, Diagnosis, and Management: 2016 Practice Guidance by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases [J].
Garcia-Tsao, Guadalupe ;
Abraldes, Juan G. ;
Berzigotti, Annalisa ;
Bosch, Jaime .
HEPATOLOGY, 2017, 65 (01) :310-335
[10]   Effect of treatment delay on the effectiveness and safety of antifibrinolytics in acute severe haemorrhage: a meta-analysis of individual patient-level data from 40 138 bleeding patients [J].
Gayet-Ageron, Angele ;
Prieto-Merino, David ;
Ker, Katharine ;
Shakur, Haleema ;
Ageron, Francois-Xavier ;
Roberts, Ian .
LANCET, 2018, 391 (10116) :125-132