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Clinical Trial
. 2017 Oct;31(10):899-910.
doi: 10.1007/s40263-017-0462-8.

Can Matching-Adjusted Indirect Comparison Methods Mitigate Placebo Response Differences Among Patient Populations in Adjunctive Trials of Brivaracetam and Levetiracetam?

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Can Matching-Adjusted Indirect Comparison Methods Mitigate Placebo Response Differences Among Patient Populations in Adjunctive Trials of Brivaracetam and Levetiracetam?

Elyse Swallow et al. CNS Drugs. 2017 Oct.

Abstract

Background and objective: Patients with focal seizures recruited into adjunctive antiepileptic drug (AED) trials have become more refractory and severe over time; concurrently, placebo responses have increased. To attempt to account for heterogeneity among trials, propensity-score weighted patient-level data were used to indirectly compare placebo responses reported in brivaracetam and levetiracetam trials.

Methods: Patient-level data from randomised, placebo-controlled brivaracetam (recruited 2007-2014) and levetiracetam (1993-1998) trials were pooled. Consistent inclusion/exclusion criteria were applied and outcomes were defined consistently. Potentially confounding baseline characteristics were adjusted for using propensity score weighting. Weighting success was assessed using placebo response.

Results: In total, 707 and 473 active drug and 399 and 253 placebo patients comprised the brivaracetam and levetiracetam groups, respectively. Before weighting, several baseline variables were significantly different between groups; after weighting, prior vagal nerve stimulation, co-morbid depression and co-morbid anxiety remained different. Before weighting, median seizure frequency reduction was 21.7 and 3.9% in the brivaracetam and levetiracetam placebo arms, respectively; after weighting, median reduction was 15.0 and 6.0%. The comparison of non-randomised groups could be biased by unobserved confounding factors and region of residence. Lifetime AED history was unavailable in the brivaracetam trials and excluded from analysis.

Conclusions: Placebo responses remained different between brivaracetam and levetiracetam trials after propensity score weighting, indicating the presence of residual confounding factors associated with placebo response in these trials. It therefore remains problematic to conduct reliable indirect comparisons of brivaracetam and levetiracetam given the current evidence base, which may apply to comparisons between other AED trials.

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Conflict of interest statement

Funding

Financial support for this study was provided entirely by a contract with UCB Pharma. The funding agreement ensured the authors’ independence in designing the study, interpreting the data, writing and publishing the report. The publisher’s open access fee was paid by the sponsor, UCB Pharma. UCB Pharma Limited is a company registered in England and Wales with registered number 00209905, with a registered office at 208 Bath Road, Slough, Berkshire SL1 3WE.

Conflict of interest

Elyse Swallow, Anna Fang and James Signorovitch are employees of Analysis Group, Inc., which received funding for this research from UCB Pharma. Jonathan Plumb and Simon Borghs are employees of UCB Pharma and own stock/stock options.

Ethical approval

This article does not contain any studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.

Prior presentation

This research has been presented in poster format at the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR) 21st Annual Meeting on 21–25 May 2016 in Washington, DC, USA.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Median percentage reduction from baseline in focal seizure frequency/28 days in placebo-treated patients, for brivaracetam and levetiracetam trials. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals. BRV brivaracetam, LEV levetiracetam
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
≥50% responder rates in placebo-treated patients enrolled in brivaracetam and levetiracetam trials. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals. BRV brivaracetam, LEV levetiracetam

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