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Reweighting Randomized Controlled Trial Evidence to Better Reflect Real Life - A Case Study of the Innovative Medicines Initiative

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posted on 2021-07-05, 11:54 authored by Michael Happich, Alan Brnabic, Douglas Faries, Keith Abrams, Katherine B Winfree, Allicia Girvan, Pall Jonsson, Joseph Johnston, Mark Belger, IMI GetReal Work Package 1
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. Evidence from randomized controlled trials available for timely health technology assessments of new pharmacological treatments and regulatory decision making may not be generalizable to local patient populations, often resulting in decisions being made under uncertainty. In recent years, several reweighting approaches have been explored to address this important question of generalizability to a target population. We present a case study of the Innovative Medicines Initiative to illustrate the inverse propensity score reweighting methodology, which may allow us to estimate the expected treatment benefit if a clinical trial had been run in a broader real-world target population. We learned that identifying treatment effect modifiers, understanding and managing differences between patient characteristic data sets, and balancing the closeness of trial and target patient populations with effective sample size are key to successfully using this methodology and potentially mitigating some of this uncertainty around local decision making.

Funding

The work leading to these results has received support from the Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking under grant agreement number (115546), resources of which are composed of financial contribution from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) and EFPIA companies’ in-kind contribution. It was conducted as part of the GetReal consortium. For further information, please refer to www.imi-getre al.eu.

History

Citation

Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, Volume108, Issue4, 2020, p. 817-825

Author affiliation

Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics

Volume

108

Issue

4

Pagination

817-825

Publisher

American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics

issn

0009-9236

eissn

1532-6535

Acceptance date

2020-03-31

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-07-05

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

English

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