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Reporting of surrogate endpoints in randomised controlled trial protocols (SPIRIT-Surrogate): extension checklist with explanation and elaboration

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posted on 2024-07-29, 15:45 authored by Anthony Muchai Manyara, Philippa Davies, Derek Stewart, Christopher J Weir, Amber E Young, Jane Blazeby, Nancy J Butcher, Sylwia Bujkiewicz, An-Wen Chan, Dalia Dawoud, Martin Offringa, Mario Ouwens, Asbjørn Hróbjartssson, Alain Amstutz, Luca Bertolaccini, Vito Domenico Bruno, Declan Devane, Christina DCM Faria, Peter B Gilbert, Ray Harris, Marissa Lassere, Lucio Marinelli, Sarah Markham, John H Powers, Yousef Rezaei, Laura Richert, Falk Schwendicke, Larisa G Tereshchenko, Achilles Thoma, Alparslan Turan, Andrew Worrall, Robin Christensen, Gary S Collins, Joseph S Ross, Rod S Taylor, Oriana Ciani

Randomised controlled trials often use surrogate endpoints to substitute for a target outcome (an outcome of direct interest and relevance to trial participants, clinicians, and other stakeholders—eg, all cause mortality) to improve efficiency (through shortened duration of follow-up, reduced sample size, and lower research costs), and for ethical or practical reasons. However, their use has a fundamental limitation in terms of uncertainty of the intervention effect on the target outcome and limited information on potential intervention harms. There have been increasing calls for improved reporting of trial protocols that use surrogate endpoints. This report presents the SPIRIT-Surrogate, an extension of the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) checklist, a consensus driven reporting guideline designed for trial protocols using surrogate endpoints as the primary outcome(s). The SPIRIT-Surrogate extension includes nine items modified from the SPIRIT 2013 checklist. The guideline provides examples and explanations for each item. We recommend that all stakeholders (including trial investigators and sponsors, research ethics reviewers, funders, journal editors, and peer reviewers) use this extension in reporting trial protocols that use surrogate endpoints. Its use will allow for improved design of such trials, improved transparency, and interpretation of findings when trials are completed, and ultimately reduced research waste.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMJ

Volume

386

Pagination

e078525

Publisher

BMJ

issn

0959-8138

eissn

1756-1833

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-07-29

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Sylwia Bujkiewicz

Deposit date

2024-07-18

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