事件(粒子物理)
指南
临床试验
补遗
意义(存在)
医学物理学
妥协
口译(哲学)
医学
计算机科学
心理学
内科学
心理治疗师
社会学
物理
量子力学
社会科学
病理
政治学
法学
程序设计语言
作者
Jonathan Siegel,Hans‐Jochen Weber,Stefan Englert,Feng Liu,Michelle Casey
摘要
Abstract Time‐to‐event estimands are central to many oncology clinical trials. The estimands framework (addendum to the ICH E9 guideline) calls for precisely defining the treatment effect of interest to align with the clinical question of interest and requires predefining the handling of intercurrent events (ICEs) that occur after treatment initiation and “affect either the interpretation or the existence of the measurements associated with the clinical question of interest.” We discuss a practical problem in clinical trial design and execution, that is, in some clinical contexts it is not feasible to systematically follow patients to an event of interest. Loss to follow‐up in the presence of intercurrent events can affect the meaning and interpretation of the study results. We provide recommendations for trial design, stressing the need for close alignment of the clinical question of interest and study design, impact on data collection, and other practical implications. When patients cannot be systematically followed, compromise may be necessary to select the best available estimand that can be feasibly estimated under the circumstances. We discuss the use of sensitivity and supplementary analyses to examine assumptions of interest.
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