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Reporting of harms in randomized controlled trials: what can be done? Prof. Hanna Szajewska The Medical University of Warsaw Department of Paediatrics [email protected] Hierarchy of evidence for questions about the effectiveness of an intervention Systematic review /metaanalysis RCT Strong Cohort studies Case-control studies Case series studies Expert opinion without explicit critical appraisal, theories bases on physiology or plausibility, bench top research & animal studies Weak Some figures • An analysis of more than 1000 systematic reviews/meta-analyses of health care interventions – 27% reviewed any harm data – Only 4% primarily focused on safety Ernst & Pittler. BMJ 2001;323:546. Reporting harms may cause more trouble and discredit than the fame and glory with successful reporting of benefits. Cuervo LG & Clarke M. BMJ 2003 Outline • Why it is important to consider safety (harms) in randomized controlled trials/systematic reviews? • What can be done? – CONSORT Statement Why it is important to consider safety in systematic reviews? • Should probiotics be given routinely to preterm infants to prevent NEC? • Does DHA intake contributes to the visual development of infants up to 12 months of age? • Should protein hydrolysates be given for allergy prevention to all infants regardless the risk of allergy? • Are those interventions likely to be more beneficial than harmful? Why it is important to consider safety in systematic reviews? To make informed, evidence based decisions on a given intervention information on benefits as well as harms are needed Benefits Harms The CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) Ioannidas et al. Ann Intern Med. 2004;141:781-88. Terminology Many terms are used interchangeably to describe harms associated with healthcare interventions Term Definition Safety Reasonable certainty of no harm or, in some systems, a reasonable balance between costs (harm) and benefits Adverse effect An adverse event for which the casual relation between the drug/intervention and the event is at least a reasonable possibility Adverse event An adverse outcome that occurs during or after the use of a drug or other intervention but is not necessarily caused by it Side effect Any unintended effect, adverse or beneficial, of an intervention Ioannidas et al. Ann Intern Med. 2004;141:781-88. Terminology Harms instead of safety • CONSORT group encourages to use the term ‘harms‘ instead of ‘safety’ • Rationale – ‘Safety’ is a reassuring term that may obscure the real and potentially major ‘harms’ that interventions may cause Ioannidas et al. Ann Intern Med. 2004;141:781-88. Terminology Used interchangeably Term Definition Harms The totality of possible adverse consequences of an intervention or therapy; they are direct opposite of benefits, against which they must be compared Safety Reasonable certainty of no harm or, in some systems, a reasonable balance between costs (harm) and benefits Adverse effect An adverse event for which the casual relation between the drug/intervention and the event is at least a reasonable possibility Adverse event An adverse outcome that occurs during or after the use of a drug or other intervention but is not necessarily caused by it Side effect Any unintended effect, adverse or beneficial, of an intervention Title & Abstract • Recommendation 1 • If the study collected data on harms and benefits, the title or abstract should so state. – Example • Maurer M et al. Efficacy and safety of omalizumab in patients with chronic urticaria who exhibit IgE against thyroperoxidase. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2011 Jul;128(1):202-209.e5. Title & Abstract • Recommendation 1 • If the study collected data on harms and benefits, the title or abstract should so state. – Cochrane Library, issue 3, 2011 – There are 686 results out of 651035 records for: "harm in Title, Abstract or Keywords in Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials” Background • Recommendation 2 – If the trial addresses both harms and benefits, the introduction should so state. • What is known? • What is not known? • Why we did this study? – RCTs that focus primarily on harms should clearly state this interest when describing the study objectives in the Introduction and in defining these objectives in the Methods. Methods Outcomes • Recommendation 3 – List addressed adverse events with definitions for each • with attention, when relevant, to grading, expected vs. unexpected events, reference to standardized and validated definitions, and description of new definitions Methods Outcomes • Define the recorded AE (clinical and laboratory) • Explain whether the reported AE ecompass all the recorded AE or a selected sample • How, why, and who selected AE for reporting • In trials that do not mention harm-related data, the Methods section should briefly explain the reason for the omission – eg. ‘the design did not include the collection of any information on harms’ Methods Outcomes • Reporting of expected vs unexpected AE – Expectation may influence the incidence of reported AE – Making participants aware in the consent form of the possibility of a specific adverse event may increase the reporting rate of the event Methods Outcomes • Standardized and validated vs. nonvalidated scales – Standardized • For example, standardized case definitions of adverse events following immunisation Vaccine 2002;21:298-302 – Nonvalided • Still common Methods Outcomes • New definitions – Should be explicit and clear – Authors should describe how they developed and validated new scales NEJM 2006 J Pediatr 2010 Methods • Recommendation 4 – Clarify how harms-related information was collected • • • • • mode of data collection timing attribution methods intensity of ascertainment, harms-related monitoring and stopping rules, if pertinent Methods • Mode of data collection – questionnaires, interviews, tests • Timing – during intervention? after intervention • attribution methods – Whether or not an adverse event is related to the intervention – State who makes the attribution (investigators, participants, sponsors, or combinations) • intensity of ascertainment, • harms-related monitoring and stopping rules, if pertinent Statistical methods • Recommendation 5 • Describe plans for presenting and analyzing information on harms – Coding – Handling of recurrent events – Specification of timing issues – Handling of continuous measures – Any statystical analyses Statistical methods • Using only descriptive statistics to report harms – Appropriate in most RCTs – Most trials lack power to test harms-related hypotheses and have no explicit prespecified harm-related hypotheses • Grouping of adverse events – Describe each combination – State whether the grouping was post hoc or a priori • Recurrent events – Specify whether this is count as separate events or as 1 event Results • Recommendation 6 – Describe for each arm the participant withdrawals that are due to harms and the experience with the allocated treatment Numbers analyzed • Recommendation 7 – Provide the denominators for analyses on harms • i.e. which participants and what follow-up time count toward total exposure to the allocated treatment Intention to treat analysis is usually preferred Rates of outcomes and ancillary analyses for adverse events • Recommendation 8 – Present the absolute risk for each adverse event (specyfing type, grade, and seriousness per arm) and present appropriate metrics for recurrent events, continuous variables and scale variables, whenever pertinent Example Rates of outcomes and ancillary analyses for adverse events • Recommendation 9 – Describe any subgroup analyses and exploratory analyses for harms Discussion • Recommendation 10 – Provide a balanced discussion of benefits and harms with emphasis on study limitations, generalizability, and other sources of information on harms Take home messages • Reporting of harms-related data from RCTs may be improved (CONSORT document) • Better reporting will help readers critically appraise and interpret trial results. A final comment… (paraphrasing Winston Churchill on democracy) RCTs are the worst form of evidence for clinical practice, but for now there appears to be no better alternative Thank you for your attention