Objectives: This study aimed to review the degree of personalization of benefit and harm in the reporting of recent high-profile randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving pharmacological interventions.Study Design and Setting: This study is a systematic review of RCTs published between 2012 and 2017 with at least one intervention evaluating drug therapy and meeting the "high-profile" threshold in a premier academic literature abstraction service. Our primary outcome was the proportion of trials reporting subgroup analyses of a combined benefit-harm outcome. Secondary outcomes included the proportion of trials reporting subgroup analyses or clinical prediction guide for benefits or harms. We assessed the quality of the subgroup analyses using a modified version of previously published credibility criteria.Results: Of 296 eligible RCTs, nine studies (3%) reported a combined benefit-harm endpoint. We found subgroup analyses of a combined benefit-harm endpoint in three studies (1%), a benefit endpoint in 167 studies (56.4%), and a harm endpoint in 18 studies (6.1%). The overall quality of the subgroup analyses was poor. Only one study reported a clinical prediction guide for an outcome.Conclusion: Despite great interest in the personalization of therapies, it is rarely reported in high-profile trials. Lack of rigorous and widely accepted methods may be the major barrier. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

How personalized are benefit and harm results of randomized trials? A systematic review

Marcucci, Maura;
2020-01-01

Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to review the degree of personalization of benefit and harm in the reporting of recent high-profile randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving pharmacological interventions.Study Design and Setting: This study is a systematic review of RCTs published between 2012 and 2017 with at least one intervention evaluating drug therapy and meeting the "high-profile" threshold in a premier academic literature abstraction service. Our primary outcome was the proportion of trials reporting subgroup analyses of a combined benefit-harm outcome. Secondary outcomes included the proportion of trials reporting subgroup analyses or clinical prediction guide for benefits or harms. We assessed the quality of the subgroup analyses using a modified version of previously published credibility criteria.Results: Of 296 eligible RCTs, nine studies (3%) reported a combined benefit-harm endpoint. We found subgroup analyses of a combined benefit-harm endpoint in three studies (1%), a benefit endpoint in 167 studies (56.4%), and a harm endpoint in 18 studies (6.1%). The overall quality of the subgroup analyses was poor. Only one study reported a clinical prediction guide for an outcome.Conclusion: Despite great interest in the personalization of therapies, it is rarely reported in high-profile trials. Lack of rigorous and widely accepted methods may be the major barrier. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
2020
Personalization
Benefits and harms
Subgroup analyses
Drug therapy
Systematic review
Prediction guides
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11699/96467
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