The Predictive Approaches to Treatment effect Heterogeneity (PATH) statement: Explanation and elaboration Journal Article


Authors: Kent, D. M.; van Klaveren, D.; Paulus, J. K.; D'Agostino, R.; Goodman, S.; Hayward, R.; Ioannidis, J. P. A.; Patrick-Lake, B.; Morton, S.; Pencina, M.; Raman, G.; Ross, J. S.; Selker, H. P.; Varadhan, R.; Vickers, A.; Wong, J. B.; Steyerberg, E. W.
Article Title: The Predictive Approaches to Treatment effect Heterogeneity (PATH) statement: Explanation and elaboration
Abstract: The PATH (Predictive Approaches to Treatment effect Heterogeneity) Statement was developed to promote the conduct of, and provide guidance for, predictive analyses of heterogeneity of treatment effects (HTE) in clinical trials. The goal of predictive HTE analysis is to provide patient-centered estimates of outcome risk with versus without the intervention, taking into account all relevant patient attributes simultaneously, to support more personalized clinical decision making than can be made on the basis of only an overall average treatment effect. The authors distinguished 2 categories of predictive HTE approaches (a "riskmodeling" and an "effect-modeling" approach) and developed 4 sets of guidance statements: Criteria to determine when riskmodeling approaches are likely to identify clinically meaningful HTE, methodological aspects of risk-modeling methods, considerations for translation to clinical practice, and considerations and caveats in the use of effect-modeling approaches. They discuss limitations of these methods and enumerate research priorities for advancing methods designed to generate more personalized evidence. This explanation and elaboration document describes the intent and rationale of each recommendation and discusses related analytic considerations, caveats, and reservations. © 2020 American College of Physicians.
Keywords: adult; clinical practice; risk assessment; clinical decision making; clinical trial (topic); human; article; research priority
Journal Title: Annals of Internal Medicine
Volume: 172
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0003-4819
Publisher: American College of Physicians  
Date Published: 2020-01-07
Start Page: W1
End Page: W25
Language: English
DOI: 10.7326/m18-3668
PUBMED: 31711094
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC7750907
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Andrew J Vickers
    880 Vickers