Fragility index and risk of bias in cardiovascular outcome trials for new antidiabetic drugs
dc.contributor
dc.contributor.author
dc.contributor.other
dc.date.accessioned
2021-09-08T09:01:16Z
dc.date.available
2021-09-08T09:01:16Z
dc.date.issued
2020-11
dc.identifier.uri
dc.description.abstract
Background: The alarm set by rosiglitazone, a thiazolidindione that seemed to enhance the existing
two to three-fold increased risk of cardiovascular disease comprised in T2DM, induced that regulatory
agencies issued a guidance for proving cardiovascular safety for new antidiabetic therapies. Even
though thiazolidindiones’ safety was proven afterwards, cardiovascular outcome trials (CVOTs) have
been conducted since 2008, using mainly a non-inferiority trial design. These aim for the rejection of
their null hypothesis; that the new drug is not unacceptably worse than the standard treatment. In
order to achieve that, the upper bound of the 95% confidence interval (CI) cannot exceed a HR ≤1,3
for the primary end point of combined cardiovascular death, nonfatal stroke and nonfatal myocardial
infarction. Surprisingly, some of these trials happen to find a cardiovascular outcome HR lower than 1,
meaning that cardiovascular events are lower in the experimental group than in the control group. And
therefore, are the mainstay of the pretended cardiovascular risk reduction of some new antidiabetic
agents such as SGLT-2i or GLP-1RA, ending in the inclusion of these drugs in recent widely used
clinical practice recommendations’ documents.
Objectives: The aim of this study is to assess the robustness and methodological quality of CVOTs
conducted for new antidiabetic drugs after the 2008 FDA guidance, that justify changing clinical
practice recommendations.
Methods: In order to accomplish that aim, this narrative review applied the Fragility Index (FI) and
Fragility Quotient (FQ) to eligible trials, together with the assessment of the Cochrane “Risk of Bias”
Tool RoB 2.0 for all CVOTs conducted since 2008 as a measure of internal validity. Duplicate revision
is on the way, so that preliminary results are reported.
Results: FI was applied to 7 eligible CVOTs claiming for statistical superiority, obtaining a median FI
of 50 (IQR 19-62) and a median FQ of 1,1% (IQR 0.2-1.3), value that was surpassed in 100% of the
trials by the median number of patients lost to follow-up and rate of premature discontinuation. Sub-
analyses conducted for 3 CVOTs claiming for statistical superiority that were not eligible for FI,
showed no statistical significance. RoB assessment conducted for 21 CVOTs resulted in some
concerns as the overall appraisal for 75% of them.
Conclusions: CVOTs conducted after the 2008 FDA guidance for new antidiabetic drugs for T2DM do
not provide enough statistical robustness and do have some concerns regarding their methodological
quality to justify changing clinical practice recommendations. Hence, creating some hesitation on the
reliability of the results and whether is ethical to treat with these additional drug therapies that group
of patients. Our findings demonstrate that there is a need for critical review for CVOTs, which would
probably lead to the revision of treatment recommendations
dc.format.mimetype
application/pdf
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.relation.ispartofseries
Medicina (TFG)
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
dc.rights.uri
dc.subject
dc.title
Fragility index and risk of bias in cardiovascular outcome trials for new antidiabetic drugs
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis
dc.rights.accessRights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.audience.educationlevel
Estudis de grau