Target Trial Emulation Using Hospital-Based Observational Data: Demonstration and Application in COVID-19.
Oksana MartinukaMaja Katharina von CubeDerek HazardHamid Reza MaratebMarjan MansourianRamin SamiMohammad Reza HajianSara EbrahimiMartin WolkewitzPublished in: Life (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Methodological biases are common in observational studies evaluating treatment effectiveness. The objective of this study is to emulate a target trial in a competing risks setting using hospital-based observational data. We extend established methodology accounting for immortal time bias and time-fixed confounding biases to a setting where no survival information beyond hospital discharge is available: a condition common to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) research data. This exemplary study includes a cohort of 618 hospitalized patients with COVID-19. We describe methodological opportunities and challenges that cannot be overcome applying traditional statistical methods. We demonstrate the practical implementation of this trial emulation approach via clone-censor-weight techniques. We undertake a competing risk analysis, reporting the cause-specific cumulative hazards and cumulative incidence probabilities. Our analysis demonstrates that a target trial emulation framework can be extended to account for competing risks in COVID-19 hospital studies. In our analysis, we avoid immortal time bias, time-fixed confounding bias, and competing risks bias simultaneously. Choosing the length of the grace period is justified from a clinical perspective and has an important advantage in ensuring reliable results. This extended trial emulation with the competing risk analysis enables an unbiased estimation of treatment effects, along with the ability to interpret the effectiveness of treatment on all clinically important outcomes.
Keyphrases
- coronavirus disease
- clinical trial
- sars cov
- study protocol
- phase ii
- phase iii
- randomized controlled trial
- electronic health record
- healthcare
- systematic review
- type diabetes
- big data
- adipose tissue
- open label
- risk assessment
- emergency department
- skeletal muscle
- human health
- adverse drug
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- combination therapy
- climate change
- cross sectional