Investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trial

Abstract Background The STREAM trial demonstrated that a 9–11-month “short” regimen had non-inferior efficacy and comparable safety to a 20+ month “long” regimen for the treatment of rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Imbalance in the components of the composite primary outcome merited further inves...

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Main Authors: P. P. J. Phillips, A. Van Deun, S. Ahmed, R. L. Goodall, S. K. Meredith, F. Conradie, C-Y Chiang, I. D. Rusen, A. J. Nunn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:BMC Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-020-01770-z
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spelling doaj-8922a96d6af74a47812ba7f00a40d10f2020-11-25T03:58:27ZengBMCBMC Medicine1741-70152020-11-0118111210.1186/s12916-020-01770-zInvestigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trialP. P. J. Phillips0A. Van DeunS. Ahmed1R. L. Goodall2S. K. Meredith3F. Conradie4C-Y Chiang5I. D. Rusen6A. J. Nunn7UCSF Center for Tuberculosis, University of California San FranciscoMRC Clinical Trials Unit at UCLMRC Clinical Trials Unit at UCLMRC Clinical Trials Unit at UCLFaculty of Health Sciences, University of WitwatersrandDivision of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Wanfang Hospital, Taipei Medical UniversityResearch Division, Vital StrategiesMRC Clinical Trials Unit at UCLAbstract Background The STREAM trial demonstrated that a 9–11-month “short” regimen had non-inferior efficacy and comparable safety to a 20+ month “long” regimen for the treatment of rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Imbalance in the components of the composite primary outcome merited further investigation. Methods Firstly, the STREAM primary outcomes were mapped to alternatives in current use, including WHO programmatic outcome definitions and other recently proposed modifications for programmatic or research purposes. Secondly, the outcomes were re-classified according to the likelihood that it was a Failure or Relapse (FoR) event on a 5-point Likert scale: Definite, Probable, Possible, Unlikely, and Highly Unlikely. Sensitivity analyses were employed to explore the impact of informative censoring. The protocol-defined modified intention-to-treat (MITT) analysis population was used for all analyses. Results Cure on the short regimen ranged from 75.1 to 84.2% across five alternative outcomes. However, between-regimens results did not exceed 1.3% in favor of the long regimen (95% CI upper bound 10.1%), similar to the primary efficacy results from the trial. Considering only Definite or Probable FoR events, there was weak evidence of a higher risk of FoR in the short regimen, HR 2.19 (95%CI 0.90, 5.35), p = 0.076; considering only Definite FoR events, the evidence was stronger, HR 3.53 (95%CI 1.05, 11.87), p = 0.030. Cumulative number of grade 3–4 AEs was the strongest predictor of censoring. Considering a larger effect of informative censoring attenuated treatment differences, although 95% CI were very wide. Conclusion Five alternative outcome definitions gave similar overall results. The risk of failure or relapse (FoR) may be higher in the short regimen than in the long regimen, highlighting the importance of how loss to follow-up and other censoring is accounted for in analyses. The outcome of time to FoR should be considered as a primary outcome for future drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB treatment trials, provided sensitivity analyses exploring the impact of departures from independent censoring are also included.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-020-01770-zMDR-TBTuberculosisShort regimenNon-inferiorityCausal inferenceInverse probability of censoring weighting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. P. J. Phillips
A. Van Deun
S. Ahmed
R. L. Goodall
S. K. Meredith
F. Conradie
C-Y Chiang
I. D. Rusen
A. J. Nunn
spellingShingle P. P. J. Phillips
A. Van Deun
S. Ahmed
R. L. Goodall
S. K. Meredith
F. Conradie
C-Y Chiang
I. D. Rusen
A. J. Nunn
Investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trial
BMC Medicine
MDR-TB
Tuberculosis
Short regimen
Non-inferiority
Causal inference
Inverse probability of censoring weighting
author_facet P. P. J. Phillips
A. Van Deun
S. Ahmed
R. L. Goodall
S. K. Meredith
F. Conradie
C-Y Chiang
I. D. Rusen
A. J. Nunn
author_sort P. P. J. Phillips
title Investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trial
title_short Investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trial
title_full Investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trial
title_fullStr Investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trial
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant TB from the STREAM trial
title_sort investigation of the efficacy of the short regimen for rifampicin-resistant tb from the stream trial
publisher BMC
series BMC Medicine
issn 1741-7015
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background The STREAM trial demonstrated that a 9–11-month “short” regimen had non-inferior efficacy and comparable safety to a 20+ month “long” regimen for the treatment of rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Imbalance in the components of the composite primary outcome merited further investigation. Methods Firstly, the STREAM primary outcomes were mapped to alternatives in current use, including WHO programmatic outcome definitions and other recently proposed modifications for programmatic or research purposes. Secondly, the outcomes were re-classified according to the likelihood that it was a Failure or Relapse (FoR) event on a 5-point Likert scale: Definite, Probable, Possible, Unlikely, and Highly Unlikely. Sensitivity analyses were employed to explore the impact of informative censoring. The protocol-defined modified intention-to-treat (MITT) analysis population was used for all analyses. Results Cure on the short regimen ranged from 75.1 to 84.2% across five alternative outcomes. However, between-regimens results did not exceed 1.3% in favor of the long regimen (95% CI upper bound 10.1%), similar to the primary efficacy results from the trial. Considering only Definite or Probable FoR events, there was weak evidence of a higher risk of FoR in the short regimen, HR 2.19 (95%CI 0.90, 5.35), p = 0.076; considering only Definite FoR events, the evidence was stronger, HR 3.53 (95%CI 1.05, 11.87), p = 0.030. Cumulative number of grade 3–4 AEs was the strongest predictor of censoring. Considering a larger effect of informative censoring attenuated treatment differences, although 95% CI were very wide. Conclusion Five alternative outcome definitions gave similar overall results. The risk of failure or relapse (FoR) may be higher in the short regimen than in the long regimen, highlighting the importance of how loss to follow-up and other censoring is accounted for in analyses. The outcome of time to FoR should be considered as a primary outcome for future drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB treatment trials, provided sensitivity analyses exploring the impact of departures from independent censoring are also included.
topic MDR-TB
Tuberculosis
Short regimen
Non-inferiority
Causal inference
Inverse probability of censoring weighting
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-020-01770-z
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