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Causal inference for long-term survival in randomised trials with treatment switching: Should re-censoring be applied when estimating counterfactual survival times?

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posted on 2019-07-12, 12:25 authored by NR Latimer, IR White, KR Abrams, U Siebert
Treatment switching often has a crucial impact on estimates of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of new oncology treatments. Rank preserving structural failure time models (RPSFTM) and two-stage estimation (TSE) methods estimate 'counterfactual' (i.e. had there been no switching) survival times and incorporate re-censoring to guard against informative censoring in the counterfactual dataset. However, re-censoring causes a loss of longer term survival information which is problematic when estimates of long-term survival effects are required, as is often the case for health technology assessment decision making. We present a simulation study designed to investigate applications of the RPSFTM and TSE with and without re-censoring, to determine whether re-censoring should always be recommended within adjustment analyses. We investigate a context where switching is from the control group onto the experimental treatment in scenarios with varying switch proportions, treatment effect sizes, treatment effect changes over time, survival function shapes, disease severity and switcher prognosis. Methods were assessed according to their estimation of control group restricted mean survival that would be observed in the absence of switching, up to the end of trial follow-up. We found that analyses which re-censored usually produced negative bias (i.e. underestimating control group restricted mean survival and overestimating the treatment effect), whereas analyses that did not re-censor consistently produced positive bias which was often smaller in magnitude than the bias associated with re-censored analyses, particularly when the treatment effect was high and the switching proportion was low. The RPSFTM with re-censoring generally resulted in increased bias compared to the other methods. We believe that analyses should be conducted with and without re-censoring, as this may provide decision-makers with useful information on where the true treatment effect is likely to lie. Incorporating re-censoring should not always represent the default approach when the objective is to estimate long-term survival times and treatment effects.

Funding

The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: NRL is supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR Post Doctoral Fellowship, Dr Nicholas Latimer, PDF-2015-08-022); IRW is supported by the Medical Research Council (Programme number MC_UU_12023/21); KRA was partially supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) as a Senior Investigator [NF-SI-0512-10159] & is a NIHR Senior Investigator Emeritus; US was in part supported by the COMET Center ONCOTYROL (Grant no. 2073085), which is funded by the Austrian Federal Ministries BMVIT/BMWFJ (via FFG) and the Tiroler Zukunftsstiftung/Standortagentur Tirol (SAT).

History

Citation

Statistical Methods in Medical Research, 2018

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Statistical Methods in Medical Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications (UK and US)

eissn

1477-0334

Copyright date

2018

Available date

2019-07-12

Publisher version

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0962280218780856

Notes

Supplementary material is available for this article online.

Language

en

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