FDA审批过程中患者差异的解释

A. Malani, Oliver Bembom, M. J. van der Laan
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引用次数: 39

摘要

FDA在审查药物时采用的是平均患者标准:只有当(在临床试验中的)平均患者对药物的反应好于对照组时,它才会批准一种药物。然而,不同的病人对一种药物的反应不同是很常见的。因此,平均患者标准可能导致对某些患者亚组有显著负面影响的药物获得批准(假阳性),而对其他患者亚组有显著积极影响的药物不被批准(假阴性)。制药公司有避免假阴性的经济动机。在他们的临床试验表明他们的药物对普通患者没有好处之后,他们进行所谓的事后亚组分析,以突出从药物中受益的患者。FDA拒绝这样的分析,因为有可能产生虚假的结果。通过足够的数据挖掘,制药公司总能找到一些从他们的药物中受益的患者。本文询问FDA和制药公司之间是否存在可行的妥协。具体来说,我们寻求一种药物审批程序,可以使用事后亚组分析来消除假阴性,但不会冒机会主义行为和虚假相关性的风险。我们建议FDA或其他独立机构进行亚组分析,以确定可能受益于药物的患者亚组。此外,我们建议使用一些统计算法作为无知之幕规则,以确保独立代理不会被制药公司间接捕获。我们通过将其应用于最近被FDA拒绝的抗癌药物motexafin gadolinium的临床试验结果来说明我们的建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Accounting for Differences Among Patients in the FDA Approval Process
The FDA employs an average-patient standard when reviewing drugs: it approves a drug only if the average patient (in clinical trials) does better on the drug than on control. It is common, however, for different patients to respond differently to a drug. Therefore, the average-patient standard can result in approval of a drug with significant negative effects for certain patient subgroups (false positives) and disapproval of drugs with significant positive effects for other patient subgroups (false negatives). Drug companies have a financial incentive to avoid false negatives. After their clinical trials reveal that their drug does not benefit the average patient, they conduct what is called post hoc subgroup analysis to highlight patients that benefit from the drug. The FDA rejects such analysis due to the risk of spurious results. With enough data dredging, a drug company can always find some patients that benefit from their drug. This paper asks whether there workable compromise between the FDA and drug companies. Specifically, we seek a drug approval process that can use post hoc subgroup analysis to eliminate false negatives but does not risk opportunistic behavior and spurious correlation. We recommend that the FDA or some other independent agent conduct subgroup analysis to identify patient subgroups that may benefit from a drug. Moreover, we suggest a number of statistical algorithms that operate as veil of ignorance rules to ensure that the independent agent is not indirectly captured by drug companies. We illustrate our proposal by applying it to the results of a recent clinical trial of a cancer drug (motexafin gadolinium) that was recently rejected by the FDA.
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