Title: Measuring Effectiveness in Trials of Acute Bacterial Sinusitis
1 Measuring Effectiveness in Trials of Acute
Bacterial Sinusitis
- John H. Powers, MD
- Lead Medical Officer
- Antimicrobial Drug Development and Resistance
Initiatives - Office of Medical Policy
- Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration
2Introduction
- Regulatory and scientific history related to
noninferiority trials and demonstration of
effectiveness - History of discussions regarding NI trials in
antimicrobials and acute bacterial sinusitis
trials - Evaluation of historical evidence of magnitude of
effects of antimicrobials in placebo controlled
trials in acute bacterial sinusitis - Conclusions regarding current knowledge of
evaluation of effectiveness and in vitro
resistance on outcomes
3Regulatory/Scientific History
- 1938 pre-market requirement for safety only
(based on Elixir of sulfanilamide deaths) - 1962 requirement for demonstration of
effectiveness to balance any potential harms of
therapy (thalidomide) - President Kennedy sent recommendations to Senate
Committee an undefined standard of substantial
evidence of effectiveness was inadequate in
terms of assuring that drugs that reach the
market have been shown to be effective for the
claims made for them. - Congress defines that only source of substantial
evidence of effectiveness is adequate and
well-controlled trials - 1970 FDA publishes regulations that provide
criteria for defining adequate and
well-controlled trials
4Adequate and Well-Controlled
- Clear statement of objectives
- Study design permits valid quantitative
comparison with a control - Select patients with disease (treatment) or at
risk of disease (prevention) - Baseline comparability (randomization)
- Minimize bias (blinding, etc.)
- Appropriate methods of assessment of outcomes
- Appropriate methods of analysis
- 21 CFR 314.126
5Regulatory/Scientific History
- 1985 recognition of issues with trials designed
to show similarity rather than superiority of
drugs - If the intent of the trial is to show similarity
of the test and control drugs, the report of the
study should assess the ability of the study to
have detected a difference between treatments.
Similarity of test drug and active control can
mean either that both drugs were effective or
that neither was effective. The analysis of the
study should explain why the drugs should be
considered effective in the study, for example,
by reference to results in previous
placebo-controlled studies of the active control
drug. - 21 CFR 314.126 (b)(2)(iv)
6Regulatory/Scientific History
- Noninferiority trials attempt to
- rule out how much inferior a new treatment might
be compared to an already proven effective
treatment - AND ensure control drug effect relative to
placebo is consistent under the conditions of the
trial - 2000 ICH-E10 Guidance on Choice of Control
Group and Related Issues in Clinical Trials - Section 1.5 describes information necessary to
select noninferiority margin determined by
analysis of historical evidence of sensitivity to
drug effects (HESDE) - magnitude by which control drug may be reliably
and reproducibly shown superior to placebo in
previous superiority trials - Effect of control relative to placebo should be
well-characterized and consistent from trial to
trials so that effect in current trial consistent
7Regulatory/Scientific History
- Well-designed experiments have positive and
negative controls to determine results causally
related to intervention and not conditions of
experiment (internal validity) - Lack of negative controls in noninferiority
trials means they lack intrinsic measure of
internal validity - Data on effect of control relative to placebo
external to NI trial - Similar potential biases to historical controlled
trials - Conditions of experiment (e.g. enrolling patients
who do not have disease, timing of outcomes
beyond natural history of disease, etc.) may
change effect of control and affect conclusions
regardless of margin chosen - Demonstration of noninferiority does not
necessarily mean drug has demonstrated
effectiveness relative to placebo
8Regulatory/Scientific History
- Selecting of appropriate margin of inferiority
integral to design of noninferiority trials - In practice, the noninferiority margin chosen
usually will be smaller than that suggested by
the smallest effect size of the active control
because of interest in ensuring that some
clinically acceptable effect size (or fraction of
the control drug effect) was maintained. - ICH E-10, section 1.5.1.1., page 11
- Effect size refers to magnitude of benefit of
active control drug relative to placebo from
previous placebo controlled trials
9Quantitative Comparison with Control
- Three criteria before one can perform
noninferiority trial - Quantitative assessment of effect of control drug
relative to placebo based on data from previous
trials - Reliable, well-characterized and reproducible
effect from trial to trial - Based on trials that are adequate and well
controlled - Evaluation of all previous superiority trials
- Takes into account variability of the data (
confidence intervals rather than point estimates) - THEN
- 2. Selection of margin that is less than effect
of control relative to placebo to preserve some
benefit of control based on clinical judgment - AND
- 3. Maintenance constancy of the effect of the
control from trial to trial - Similar definition of disease, endpoints, timing
of endpoints - Changes in medical practice, adjunctive
therapies, antimicrobial resistance
10Definitions and Determining Margin
- M(1) defined as magnitude of benefit of active
control compared to placebo as measured in
current trial but determined from data in
previous superiority trials - M(2) defined loss of effect of test drug compared
to active control where drug is still considered
clinically useful based on clinical judgment - Results of trial demonstrate noninferiority if
success rates with test drug minus success rates
with active control exclude M(2) T C lt M(2) - BUT this only shows that test drug is effective
relative to placebo when M(2) is less then M(1)
M(2) lt M(1)
11Non-Inferiority MarginsQuantifying the Effects
of a Control Drug
Difference in Point Estimates
12Non-Inferiority MarginsQuantifying the Effects
of a Control Drug
Difference in Point Estimates
13Non-Inferiority MarginsDetermining the Effect of
a Test Drug
Difference in Point Estimates
14Non-Inferiority MarginsDetermining the Effect of
a Test Drug
Difference in Point Estimates
15Non-Inferiority MarginsDetermining the Effect of
a Test Drug
control
100
control
test
80
success rates
0
past trials
current trial
16History with Antimicrobials/ABS
- Several meetings addressing issues in
noninferiority trials in study of antimicrobials - Need to evaluate data on each indication to
determine margins or whether data to support
noninferiority trials - Issues with selection of patients with disease
- Issues with defining outcomes and timing of
outcomes - Issues with analysis (ITT and subgroup analyses)
- October 2003 AIDAC meeting on clinical trial
design in ABS - No constellation of signs/symptoms predicts
bacterial etiology so sinus puncture necessary at
to define patients with disease - No studies correlating gtten days of symptoms with
sinus punctures - Lack of evidence of specificity of radiographic
findings with positive culture on sinus puncture - No evidence to support presumed eradication of
organisms - Timing of outcome important in relation to
ability of trial to evaluate effectiveness and
time to resolution of symptoms may be most
sensitive measure of outcome - Lack of evidence from previous placebo controlled
trials to base any noninferiority margin trials
should be superiority trials
17Evaluating Data from Literature
- Criteria for submission of published literature
reports alone as evidence of effectiveness - Multiple studies conducted by different
investigators where each clearly has adequate
design and findings consistent across studies - High level of detail in published reports
including clear and adequate descriptions of
statistical analysis plans, prospectively
determined analytical methods and study
endpoints, and full accounting of all enrolled
patients - Clearly appropriate endpoints objectively
assessed and not dependent on investigator
judgment - Robust results achieved by protocol-specified
analyses that yield consistent conclusions of
efficacy and do not require selected post-hoc
analyses, subsetting or reduced datasets (e.g.
analysis of only responders) - Conduct of studies by groups with properly
documented operating procedures
Guidance for Industry Providing Clinical
Evidence of Effectiveness for Human Drugs and
Biological Products p. 19.
18What One Would Need to Justify a Margin of 10
in Acute Bacterial Sinusitis
- Similar disease definition
- Similar endpoint definition
- Similar timing of endpoint
- Constancy of effect of control
0
10
20
30
40
50
50
40
30
20
10
Favors placebo
Favors drug
19ABS Placebo Controlled Trials
- Description of trials
- 21 trials compared antimicrobial to placebo in
all languages but 4 not prospective, not
randomized and/or no direct patient outcomes - 17 randomized, prospective trials evaluated
- 2787 total patients (1132 evaluable on placebo
and 1331 evaluable) on various
drugs/doses/durations - No quinolones
- One trial in children with cefuroxime in children
(no evidence of benefit) - Dates from 1964 to 2005 (41 year span)
- 8 trials published since 2000, 2 in 2005,
showing that placebo controlled trials can and
are being performed - 3 published since last AIDAC meeting in 2003
including one in US, one in Europe and one in
pediatric population - Demographics
- Average age per trial was 37 years with age range
18-93 years - Average gender distribution per trial was 60
female in trials with adults or mixed populations
20Analysis of Efficacy in Placebo Controlled Trials
in Acute Bacterial Sinusitis
cefuroxime d14
Kristo et al. 2005 n82
pivampicillin d8
Norrelund et al. 1978 1978 n135
doxycycline d10
Stalman et al. 1997 n186
amox or amoxicillin-clav d14
Garbutt et al. 2001 n161
Lindbaek et al. 1998 n70
amoxicillin or penicillin d10
amoxicillin-clavulanate d14
Bucher et al. 2003 n251
amoxicillin d14
Merenstein et al. 2005 n135
amoxicillin d14
van Buchem et al. 1997 n206
amoxicillin d10
deSutter et al. 2003 n135
pencillin or lincomycin d10
Axelsson et al. 1970 n142
amox or doxy or penicillin d 14
Varonen et al. 2003 n146
amoxicillin or amox-clav d10
Wald et al. 1986 n93
azithromycin d8
b
Kaiser et al. 2001 n265a (77)b
a
penicillin d7
Hansen et al. 2000 n127
azithromycin d14
Haye et al. 1998 n168
amoxicillin or penicillin d10
Lindbaek et al. 1996 n127
cyclacillin (not specified)
Ganaca et al. 1973 n50
0
10
20
30
40
50
50
40
30
20
10
Favors placebo
Favors study drug
21ABS Placebo Controlled Trials
- No reliable, consistent magnitude of benefit of
antimicrobials compared to placebo M(1), so no
evidence upon which to base any noninferiority
margin - Majority of trials do not provide evidence of
benefit of antimicrobials compared to placebo
most trials powered to rule out differences of
15 to 35 which is amount needed to justify 10
to 15 margin - Trial with largest point estimate of benefit had
lower bound of 95 confidence interval 11.3
most of point estimates of treatment difference
lt10 - Point estimates success rates in placebo groups
range from 29 to 95 and point estimate success
with various drugs range from 35 to 93 - No evidence of decreasing complications or
prevention of chronic sinusitis - Cannot select loss of effect of test drug
relative to control M(2) since magnitude of
benefit of control relative to placebo M(1) not
clear - No constancy of effect of control
- Different definitions used for enrollment
criteria - None of trials used receipt of additional
antimicrobial as an endpoint - Timing of fixed endpoints vary and not longer
than 14 days for primary fixed endpoint effects
of drug compared to placebo disappear with time
22Analysis of Safety in Placebo Controlled Trials
in Acute Bacterial Sinusitis
Axelson et al. 1970 n142
van Buchem et al. 1997 n206
Stalman et al. 1997 n186
Hansen et al. 2000 n127
Kaiser et al. 2001 n265 (77)
deSutter et al. 2003 n135
Lindbaek et al. 1996 n127
odds ratio 3.89 (2.09, 7.25)
Garbutt et al. 2001 n161
p-value 0.017
Bucher et al. 2003 n251
Lindbaek et al. 1998 n70
GI AEs 3 drug, 0 placebo
6 excluded from analysis on drug, 2 on placebo
Wald et al. 1986 n93
Norrelund et al. 1978 1978 n135
Varonen et al. 2003 n146
Kristo et al. 2005 n82
Ganaca et al. 1973 n50
Haye et al. 1998 n168
Merenstein et al. 2005 n135
0
10
20
30
40
50
50
40
30
20
10
Favors placebo
Favors study drug
23Analysis of Efficacy in Placebo Controlled Trials
in Acute Bacterial Sinusitis
gemi 009
Kristo et al. 2005 n82
Norrelund et al. 1978 1978 n135
Stalman et al. 1997 n186
Garbutt et al. 2001 n161
Lindbaek et al. 1998 n70
Bucher et al. 2003 n251
Merenstein et al. 2005 n135
van Buchem et al. 1997 n206
deSutter et al. 2003 n135
Axelsson et al. 1970 n142
Varonen et al. 2003 n146
Wald et al. 1986 n93
b
a
Kaiser et al. 2001 n265a (77)b
Hansen et al. 2000 n127
Haye et al. 1998 n168
Lindbaek et al. 1996 n127
Ganaca et al. 1973 n50
0
10
20
30
40
50
50
40
30
20
10
Favors placebo
Favors study drug
24In Vitro Resistance and Clinical Outcomes
- Given uncertainty about magnitude of treatment
effect with any drug, correlation between in
vitro resistance and clinical outcomes also
unclear - Even with susceptible organisms, lack of
correlation between microbiological outcomes and
clinical outcomes in patients - Bacterial survival in the maxillary sinus
despite a high concentration in the sinus
illustrates that MIC values determined in the
laboratory do not always mirror the sensitivity
of the bacteria to antibiotics in vivo. - Carenfeldt C et al. Scand J Infect Dis
19757259-64. - Patient often recover clinically despite
persistence of organism and differences in
potency of antimicrobials does not necessarily
translate into differences in clinical outcomes - Carenfeldt C et al. Acta Otolaryngol
199010128-135.
25Conclusions
- Need for demonstration of effect of control drug
relative to placebo in noninferiority trial has
been noted in regulations since 1980s - Evaluation of previous placebo controlled trials
in ABS does not show reliable and reproducible
magnitude of effects of antimicrobials relative
to placebo for studying new drugs in clinical
trials - Demonstration of noninferiority in acute
bacterial sinusitis trials still leaves
uncertainty as to whether this demonstrates
effectiveness of drugs relative to placebo - Demonstration of effectiveness needed to balance
any potential harms of therapy
26Back Up Slides
27Substantial Evidence
- Upjohn contends that the totality of materials,
which include these 54 articles, the material
submitted over the years since these products
were certified, and the clinical experience in
totality clearly satisfy the substantial
evidence. It says the clinical experience,
widespread throughout the world, used by
thousands upon thousands of doctors in 750
million doses is a very significant factor. - Upjohn v. Finch, 1970 Appendix A, p. 12
28Substantial Evidence
- The Commissioner concludes that Congress itself
has described the type of evidence that is
suitable to support claims of effectiveness. The
claims must be supported by adequate and well
controlled investigations. This means that the
experimental factors must be so controlled that
the effectiveness of an anti-infective drug on
the disease process in patients can be compared
with the effect of no treatment or of a
recognized effective treatment of patients with
the same disease or condition. - Upjohn v. Finch, 1970 Appendix A, p. 12
29Substantial Evidence
- Upjohn recognizes this fact, but contends that
several in vitro studies reported, the mouse
study, and the uncontrolled observations reported
in the literature, when added to the evidence
obtained from the studies in which controls were
attempted, raise the quality of the data to the
level required by the law. - Upjohn v. Finch, 1970 Appendix A, p. 12
30Substantial Evidence
- The in vitro studies are suggestive of some
effectivenessin laboratory experiments utilizing
artificially cultured microorganisms as test
systems, but because the studies are not at all
correlated clinical trial experience they
cannot be used as a basis for concluding the
drugs will have the effectiveness claimed for
them when used to treat naturally occurring
clinical disease in man. - Upjohn v. Finch, 1970 Appendix A, p. 12