Issues in Using Progression-Free Survival When Evaluating Oncology Products

被引:135
作者
Fleming, Thomas R. [1 ]
Rothmann, Mark D.
Lu, Hong Laura
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Biostat, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
SURROGATE END-POINTS; METASTATIC COLORECTAL-CANCER; CLINICAL-TRIALS; RANDOMIZED-TRIALS; DESIGN;
D O I
10.1200/JCO.2008.20.4107
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Several challenging and often controversial issues arise in oncology trials with the use of the end point progression-free survival (PFS),defined to be the time to detection of progressive disease or death. While this end point does not directly measure how a patient feels, functions, or survives, it does provide insights about whether an intervention affects the tumor burden process, the intended mechanism through which it is hoped that most anticancer agents will provide benefit. However, simply achieving statistically significant effects on PFS is insufficient to obtaining reliable evidence of important clinical benefit, and even is insufficient to justifying the conclusion that the experimental intervention is "reasonably likely to provide clinical benefit." The magnitude of the effect on PFS in addition to the statistical strength of evidence is of great importance in interpreting the reliability of the evidence regarding clinical efficacy. PFS has several important properties, including being a direct measure of the effect of treatment on the tumor burden process, being sensitive to cytostatic as well as cytotoxic mechanisms of interventions, and incorporating the clinically relevant event of death, increasing its sensitivity to influential harmful mechanisms and avoiding substantial bias that arises when deaths are censored. To obtain reliable evidence about the effect of an intervention on PFS and patient survival, randomized trials should be conducted where all patients are followed to progression and death, and where patients in a control arm do not cross-in at progression unless the experimental regimen has already been established to be effective rescue treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:2874 / 2880
页数:7
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2007, GUID IND CLIN TRIAL
[2]   Evaluation of tumor response, disease control, progression-free survival, and time to progression as potential surrogate end points in metastatic breast cancer [J].
Burzykowski, Tomasz ;
Buyse, Marc ;
Piccart-Gebhart, Martine J. ;
Sledge, George ;
Carmichael, James ;
Lueck, Hans-Joachim ;
Mackey, John R. ;
Nabholtz, Jean-Marc ;
Paridaens, Robert ;
Biganzoli, Laura ;
Jassem, Jacek ;
Bontenbal, Marijke ;
Bonneterre, Jacques ;
Chan, Stephen ;
Basaran, Gul Atalay ;
Therasse, Patrick .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2008, 26 (12) :1987-1992
[3]  
BUYSE M, 2007, J CLIN ONCOL, V25, P5128
[4]   Analysis of progression-free survival in oncology trials: Some common statistical issues [J].
Carroll, Kevin J. .
PHARMACEUTICAL STATISTICS, 2007, 6 (02) :99-113
[5]   Blinded independent central review of progression-free survival in phase III clinical trials: Important design element or unnecessary expense? [J].
Dodd, Lori E. ;
Korn, Edward L. ;
Freidlin, Boris ;
Jaffe, C. Carl ;
Rubinstein, Lawrence V. ;
Dancey, Janet ;
Mooney, Margaret M. .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2008, 26 (22) :3791-3796
[6]  
*EUR MED AG, 2008, METH CONS US PROGR F
[7]  
*EUR MED AG, 2005, GUID EV ANT MED PROD
[8]  
*FDA, FDA MED REV
[9]  
*FDA, 2000, ONC DRUGS ADV COMM M
[10]  
*FDA, FDA STAT REV EV