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A Conservative Approach for Analysis of Noninferiority Trials With Missing Data and Subject Noncompliance

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Version 2 2019-11-22, 14:43
Version 1 2019-10-08, 18:48
journal contribution
posted on 2019-11-22, 14:43 authored by Brooke A. Rabe, Melanie L. Bell

Noninferiority clinical trials aim to show an experimental treatment is therapeutically no worse than standard of care, particularly if the new treatment is preferred for reasons such as cost, convenience, safety, and so on. Noninferiority trials are by nature less conservative than superiority studies: protocol violations may increase bias toward the alternative hypothesis of noninferiority. Our objective was to compare multiple imputation, a linear mixed model, and other methods for analyzing a longitudinal trial with missing data in intention-to-treat and per-protocol populations. We simulated trials with missing data and noncompliance due to treatment inefficacy under varying trial conditions (e.g., trajectory of treatment effects, correlation between repeated measures, and missing data mechanism), assessing each approach by estimating bias, Type I error, and power. We found that multiple imputation using auxiliary data on noncompliance in the imputation model performed best. A hybrid intention-to-treat/per-protocol multiple imputation approach with a missing not at random imputation model produced low Type I error, was unbiased and maintained reasonable power to detect noninferiority. We conclude that the anti-conservatism of noninferiority trial estimands conforming with the intention-to-treat principle may be offset by imputation models that include variables on intercurrent events. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

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