Proportional hazards violations in phase III cancer clinical trials: A potential source of trial misinterpretation Journal Article


Authors: Lin, T. A.; McCaw, Z. R.; Koong, A.; Lin, C.; Abi Jaoude, J.; Patel, R.; Kouzy, R.; El Alam, M. B.; Sherry, A. D.; Noticewala, S. S.; Fuller, C. D.; Thomas, C. R.; Sun, R.; Lee, J. J.; Lin, R.; Yuan, Y.; Shyr, Y.; Meirson, T.; Ludmir, E. B.
Article Title: Proportional hazards violations in phase III cancer clinical trials: A potential source of trial misinterpretation
Abstract: PURPOSE: Survival analyses of novel agents with long-term responders often exhibit differential hazard rates over time. Such proportional hazards violations (PHV) may reduce the power of the log-rank test and lead to misinterpretation of trial results. We aimed to characterize the incidence and study attributes associated with PHVs in phase III oncology trials and assess the utility of restricted mean survival time and maximum combination test as additional analyses. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Clinicaltrials.gov and PubMed were searched to identify two-arm, randomized, phase III superiority-design cancer trials with time-to-event primary endpoints and published results through 2020. Patient-level data were reconstructed from published Kaplan-Meier curves. PHVs were assessed using Schoenfeld residuals. RESULTS: Three hundred fifty-seven Kaplan-Meier comparisons across 341 trials were analyzed, encompassing 292,831 enrolled patients. PHVs were identified in 85/357 [23.8%; 95% confidence interval (CI), 19.7%, 28.5%] comparisons. In multivariable analysis, non-overall survival endpoints [OR, 2.16 (95% CI, 1.21, 3.87); P = 0.009] were associated with higher odds of PHVs, and immunotherapy comparisons [OR 1.94 (95% CI, 0.98, 3.86); P = 0.058] were weakly suggestive of higher odds of PHVs. Few trials with PHVs (25/85, 29.4%) prespecified a statistical plan to account for PHVs. Fourteen trials with PHVs exhibited discordant statistical signals with restricted mean survival time or maximum combination test, of which 10 (71%) reported negative results. CONCLUSIONS: PHVs are common across therapy types, and attempts to account for PHVs in statistical design are lacking despite the potential for results exhibiting nonproportional hazards to be misinterpreted. ©2024 American Association for Cancer Research.
Keywords: survival analysis; mortality; research design; methodology; neoplasm; neoplasms; proportional hazards models; randomized controlled trials as topic; proportional hazards model; clinical trials, phase iii as topic; kaplan meier method; therapy; randomized controlled trial (topic); phase 3 clinical trial (topic); kaplan-meier estimate; humans; human
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 30
Issue: 20
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2024-10-15
Start Page: 4791
End Page: 4799
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.Ccr-24-0566
PUBMED: 39133081
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11479825
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Roshal Patel
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