A noninferiority design for a delayed calcineurin inhibitor substitution trial in kidney transplantation.
Peter W NickersonRobert F BalshawChristopher WiebeJulie HoIan W GibsonNancy D BridgesDavid N RushPeter S HeegerPublished in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2020)
Improving long-term kidney transplant outcomes requires novel treatment strategies, including delayed calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) substitution, tested using informative trial designs. An alternative approach to the usual superiority-based trial is a noninferiority trial design that tests whether an investigational agent is not unacceptably worse than standard of care. An informative noninferiority design, with biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR) as the endpoint, requires determination of a prespecified, evidence-based noninferiority margin for BPAR. No such information is available for delayed CNI substitution in kidney transplantation. Herein we analyzed data from recent kidney transplant trials of CNI withdrawal and "real world" CNI- based standard of care, containing subjects with well-documented evidence of immune quiescence at 6 months posttransplant-ideal candidates for delayed CNI substitution. Our analysis indicates an evidence-based noninferiority margin of 13.8% for the United States Food and Drug Administration's composite definition of BPAR between 6 and 24 months posttransplant. Sample size estimation determined that ~225 randomized subjects would be required to evaluate noninferiority for this primary clinical efficacy endpoint, and superiority for a renal function safety endpoint. Our findings provide the basis for future delayed CNI substitution noninferiority trials, thereby increasing the likelihood they will provide clinically implementable results and achieve regulatory approval.
Keyphrases
- kidney transplantation
- phase iii
- phase ii
- study protocol
- clinical trial
- open label
- healthcare
- drug administration
- palliative care
- double blind
- quality improvement
- placebo controlled
- randomized controlled trial
- liver failure
- pain management
- mass spectrometry
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- transcription factor
- skeletal muscle
- electronic health record
- ultrasound guided
- adipose tissue
- risk assessment
- health insurance
- aortic dissection