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Duration of and time to response in oncology clinical trials from the perspective of the estimand framework.

Hans Jochen WeberStephen CorsonJiang LiFrançois MercierSatrajit RoychoudhuryMartin Oliver SailerSteven SunAlexander ToddGodwin Yungnull null
Published in: Pharmaceutical statistics (2023)
Duration of response (DOR) and time to response (TTR) are typically evaluated as secondary endpoints in early-stage clinical studies in oncology when efficacy is assessed by the best overall response and presented as the overall response rate. Despite common use of DOR and TTR in particular in single-arm studies, the definition of these endpoints and the questions they are intended to answer remain unclear. Motivated by the estimand framework, we present relevant scientific questions of interest for DOR and TTR and propose corresponding estimand definitions. We elaborate on how to deal with relevant intercurrent events which should follow the same considerations as implemented for the primary response estimand. A case study in mantle cell lymphoma illustrates the implementation of relevant estimands of DOR and TTR. We close the paper with practical recommendations to implement DOR and TTR in clinical study protocols.
Keyphrases
  • early stage
  • clinical trial
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • primary care
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • clinical practice
  • study protocol