Scaling and interpreting treatment effects in clinical trials using restricted mean survival time

Author:

Karrison Theodore1ORCID,Hu Chen2ORCID,Dignam James1

Affiliation:

1. Public Health Sciences, University of Chicago and NRG/Oncology, Chicago, IL, USA

2. Johns Hopkins University and NRG/Oncology, Baltimore, MD, USA

Abstract

Background: Restricted mean survival time is the expected duration of survival up to a chosen time of restriction [Formula: see text]. For comparison studies, the difference in restricted mean survival times between two groups provides a summary measure of the treatment effect that is free of assumptions regarding the relative shape of the two survival curves, such as proportional hazards. However, it can be difficult to judge the magnitude of the effect from a comparison of restricted means due to the truncation of observation at time [Formula: see text]. Methods: In this article, we describe additional ways of expressing the treatment effect based on restricted means that can be helpful in this regard. These include the ratio of restricted means, the ratio of life-years (or time) lost, and the average integrated difference between the survival curves, equal to the difference in restricted means divided by [Formula: see text] These alternative metrics are straightforward to calculate and provide a means for scaling the effect size as an aid to interpretation. Examples from two randomized, multicenter clinical trials in prostate cancer, NRG/RTOG 0521 and NRG/RTOG 0534, with primary endpoints of overall survival and biochemical/radiological progression-free survival, respectively, are presented to illustrate the ideas. Results: The four effect measures (restricted mean survival time difference, restricted mean survival time ratio, time lost ratio, and average survival rate difference) were 0.45 years, 1.05, 0.81, and 0.038 for RTOG 0521 and 1.36 years, 1.17, 0.56, and 0.12 for RTOG 0534 with [Formula: see text] = 12 and 11 years, respectively. Thus, for example, the 0.45-year difference in the first trial translates into a 19% reduction in time lost and a 3.8% average absolute difference between the survival curves over the 12-year horizon, a modest effect size, whereas the 1.36-year difference in the second trial corresponds to a 44% reduction in time lost and a 12% absolute survival difference, a rather large effect. Conclusions: In addition to the difference in restricted mean survival times, these alternative measures can be helpful in determining whether the magnitude of the treatment effect is clinically meaningful.

Funder

national cancer institute

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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