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Effective Presentation of Study Results

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Effective Presentation of Study Results How are RCTs presented in abstracts & publications? and Some things to consider in your own presentations – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effective Presentation of Study Results


1
Effective Presentation of Study Results
How are RCTs presented in abstracts
publications? and Some things to consider in your
own presentations
NCIC CTG New Investigators Course October
2009 Christopher Booth MD FRCPC Queens
University Cancer Research Institute
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
2
Outline Part I
  • How are RCTs presented in abstracts
    publications?
  • Evolution of endpoints and perception of benefit
    in oncology RCTs over time
  • What results are clinically meaningful?
  • RCTs closed early for benefit
  • How are RCTs presented at conferences?

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
3
Outline Part II
  • Issues to consider when presenting your study
    results
  • Audience
  • Preparation
  • Key messages
  • Fancy PowerPoint
  • Summary

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
4
Part I How are RCTs presented in abstracts
publications?
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
5
1. How have endpoints and perception of benefit
evolved in oncology RCTs?
6
Study Design
  • Overview of all RCTs systemic therapy in breast,
    NSCLC, colorectal cancer
  • 1975-2004
  • 6 major journals JCO, Cancer Treatment Reports,
    JNCI, NEJM, Lancet, JAMA
  • Data abstraction using standardized forms and
    methodology

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
7
Temporal Trends
1975-84 1985-94 1995-2004 P value (trend)
Total RCTs 47 (15) 107 (33) 167 (52) lt0.0001

Breast RCTs 19 (40) 53 (50) 81 (49) 0.475
NSCLC RCTs 23 (49) 29 (27) 39 (23) 0.002
CRC RCTs 5 (11) 25 (23) 47 (28) 0.017
321 RCTS over three decades involving gt170 000
patients
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
8
Study Participants
1975-84 1985-94 1995-04 P (trend)
International 26 28 52 lt0.0001
Co-op group 28 56 43 0.661

Sample size 100 249 446 lt0.0001
Accrual time 30 mo 41 mo 33 mo 0.93
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
9
Statistics
1975-84 1985-94 1995-04 P (trend)
1º endpoint
Time to event 39 72 78 lt0.0001
RR 54 25 14 lt0.0001
ITT analysis
Any 70 87 93 lt0.0001
33 of RCTs in 1995-2004 did not clearly identify
primary endpoint
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
10
Sponsorship
1975-84 1985-94 1995-04 P (trend)
Government 60 62 31 lt0.0001
Industry 4 23 57 lt0.0001
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
11
Effect Size and Conclusions
1975-1984 1985-1994 1995-2004
Median HR (95CI) 1.4 (1.0-2.3) 1.2 (1.0-2.4) 1.2 (1.1-1.3)
Plt0.05 for primary EP 23 30 42
Strong endorsement 31 39 49
1. Effect size stable over time 2. Modern RCTs
more likely to have plt0.05 3. Modern authors more
likely to call their trial positive
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
12
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
13
Key Findings
  1. Increase in number and size of RCTs
  2. More international trials, faster accrual
  3. Shift in primary endpoint from RR to survival EPs
  4. Major shift towards for-profit sponsorship
  5. Effect size has remained stable over time
  6. Authors of modern RCTs more likely to endorse
    experimental arm
  7. For-profit sponsorship and plt0.05 are
    independently associated with strong endorsement
    of experimental arm

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
14
2. Are these results clinically meaningful?
  • Clinically Relevant Endpoints
  • Patients define a useful therapy as one that
  • increases survival OR
  • improves QOL/reduces symptoms of cancer
  • Reassuring shift from RR to survival endpoints
  • Increasing use and recognition of PROs
    Gemcitabine Pancreas TAX 327 HRPC

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
15
Clinically Relevant Endpoints
  • Current standards for analyzing QOL and symptom
    control need improvement
  • 112 RCTs for advanced cancer
  • 19 established a priori hypothesis
  • 21 defined minimal differences in QOL scores
    that were clinically meaningful
  • Increasing use of surrogate endpoints (DFS, PFS)

Joly et al Ann Oncol 2007 Sargent et al JCO 2005
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
16
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
17
Clinically Relevant Endpoints
  • Clinical benefit (CB) in trials of pancreas
    cancer
  • composite improvement in pain, weight,
    performance status
  • CB now widely (mis)used to describe PR/CR/SD
  • 71 trials in JCO since 1997
  • 28 used patient-centered definition
  • 72 referred to objective tumor measurements

Burris et al JCO 1997 Ohorodnyk et al ASCO 2009
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
18
(No Transcript)
19
3. RCTs Closed Early for Benefit
Korn et al JCO 2009 Sargent JCO 2009
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
20
Korn et al JCO 2008
  • 27 NCI co-operative group trials that were closed
    early for benefit
  • Of the 18 trials with follow-up available,
    initial magnitudes of benefit were preserved in
    17 (94) trials
  • the system is working
  • Dan Sargent JCO 2008

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
21
Booth, Meyer et al Under Review
  • Literature search identified 62 RCTCEB
  • Primary endpoint not explicitly stated in 19
  • ITT all randomized patients in only 66
  • Most trials open to accrual (45/62, 73) at the
    time of closure.
  • Formal IA performed in 56 (90) trials
  • 75 (42/56) planned and 79 (44/56) reported
    stopping rules.
  • Trials on average accrued 73 of the planned
    sample size.
  • Follow-up reports for 18 (29) RCTCEB show that
    results and conclusions were maintained.

22
4. How are RCTs presented at conferences?
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
23
Trial Reporting NFAs
  • 138 RCTs published 2000-2004
  • 197 corresponding abstracts 1990-2004
  • Results were stated or implied to be non-final
    analyses in 86 abstracts (44)
  • 124 abstracts (63) discordant with article
  • Conclusions substantively different in 17 (10)

Meeting abstracts often include NFAs and are
often discordant with mature publication
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
24
Bias in Oncology RCTs
  • Publication Bias
  • 510 RCTs presented at ASCO 1989-1998
  • 26 were not published within 5 years
  • 81 of trials with plt0.05 were published compared
    to 68 of trials with pgt0.05
  • This should improve with mandatory trial
    registration

Krzyzanowska JAMA 2003
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
25
Bias in Oncology RCTs
  • Sponsorship Bias
  • Multiple studies have demonstrated that RCTs
    sponsored by industry are more likely to be
    positive than non-industry trials
  • Reasons are likely complex and multifactorial

Djulbegovic Lancet 2000 Booth JCO 2008 Peppercorn
Cancer 2007
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
26
ACS 2008 Statistics
27
Part I SUMMARY
  • 1. Major changes in cancer treatment/research
    since 1970s
  • Patient outcomes have improved
  • RCT methodology and reporting are improving
  • Trials are larger, complex, stronger
    correlative component
  • What constitutes a positive trial has changed
  • 2. It is critical to keep in patient-centered
    outcomes in focus at every step of the drug
    development pathway
  • 3. Be critical in the way you interpret results
    of RCTs in published form and at conferences

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
28
Acknowledgements
  • Drs. Ralph Meyer and Bill Mackillop
  • NCIC Clinical Trials Group
  • Queens University Cancer Research Institute
  • Kingston, Ontario
  • Drs. Ian Tannock and Monika Krzyzanowska
  • Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ontario

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
29
Part IIThings to consider when presenting your
own study results
The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
30
Topics for Discussion
  1. Audience
  2. Preparation and timing
  3. Key messages
  4. Fancy PowerPoint (?)
  5. Summary
  6. Time for discussion

The Cancer Research Institute at Queens
University Division of Cancer Care and
Epidemiology
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