Fragility of overactive bladder medication clinical trials: A systematic review

Author:

Li Kevin D.12ORCID,Venishetty Nikit3,Fernandez Adrian M.1ORCID,Hakam Nizar1,Ghaffar Umar1,Gupta Shiv1,Patel Hiren V.1,Breyer Benjamin N.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA

2. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA

3. Paul L. Foster School of Medicine Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeOveractive bladder (OAB) syndrome significantly impairs quality of life, often necessitating pharmacological interventions with associated risks. The fragility of OAB trial outcomes, as measured by the fragility index (FI: smallest number of event changes to reverse statistical significance) and quotient (FQ: FI divided by total sample size expressed as a percentage), is critical yet unstudied.Materials and MethodsWe conducted a systematic search for randomized controlled trials on OAB medications published between January 2000 and August 2023. Inclusion criteria were trials with two parallel arms reporting binary outcomes related to OAB medications. We extracted trial details, outcomes, and statistical tests employed. We calculated FI and FQ, analyzing associations with trial characteristics through linear regression.ResultsWe included 57 trials with a median sample size of 211 participants and a 12% median lost to follow‐up. Most studies investigated anticholinergics (37/57, 65%). The median FI/FQ was 5/3.5%. Larger trials were less fragile (median FI 8; FQ 1.0%) compared to medium (FI: 4; FQ 2.5%) and small trials (FI: 4; FQ 8.3%). Double‐blinded studies exhibited higher FQs (median 2.9%) than unblinded trials (6.7%). Primary and secondary outcomes had higher FIs (median 5 and 6, respectively) than adverse events (FI: 4). Each increase in 10 participants was associated with a +0.19 increase in FI (p < 0.001).ConclusionsA change in outcome for a median of five participants, or 3.5% of the total sample size, could reverse the direction of statistical significance in OAB trials. Studies with larger sample sizes and efficacy outcomes from blinded trials were less fragile.

Publisher

Wiley

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