Common Sense Oncology principles for the design, analysis, and reporting of phase 3 randomised clinical trials
- PMID: 39914429
- DOI: 10.1016/S1470-2045(24)00451-0
Common Sense Oncology principles for the design, analysis, and reporting of phase 3 randomised clinical trials
Abstract
Common Sense Oncology (CSO) prioritises treatments providing meaningful benefits for people with cancer. Here, we describe CSO principles aimed at improving the design, analysis, and reporting of randomised, controlled, phase 3 clinical trials evaluating cancer treatments. These principles include: (1) control treatment should be the best current standard of care; (2) the preferred primary endpoint is overall survival or a validated surrogate; (3) an absolute measure of benefit should be provided, such as the difference between groups in median overall survival times or the proportion of surviving patients at a prespecified time; (4) health-related quality of life should be at least a secondary endpoint; (5) toxicity should be described objectively without subjective language diminishing its importance; (6) trials should be designed to show or rule out clinically meaningful differences in outcomes, rather than a statistically significant difference alone; (7) censoring should be detailed, and sensitivity analyses done to determine its possible effects; (8) experimental treatments known to improve overall survival at later disease stages should be offered and funded for patients progressing in the control group; and (9) reports of trials should include a lay-language summary. We include checklists to guide compliance with these principles. By encouraging adherence, CSO aims to ensure that clinical trials yield results that are scientifically robust and meaningful to patients.
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Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests BG reports consulting fees from Vivio Health. EAE reports honoraria from membership of a drug safety monitoring committee for DualityBio. WvdG was on the advisory boards of Agenus and PTC Therapeutics and reports institutional payments for being on those boards. NIC reports stock options in Canope Care. BLM reports honoraria from Servier Pharmaceuticals. GRM reports payments for writing from MashupMD and Medscape and institutional funds from Janssen. GRP reports consulting fees from Profound Medical, Merck, AstraZeneca and Takeda, and has a close family member who is employed by and holds stock in Roche. BEW reports consulting fees from AstraZeneca and Novartis and a grant from Bristol-Meyers Squibb. All other authors declare no competing interests.
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