articleBMC Medical Research MethodologyDec 1, 2013GOLD OA

Restricted mean survival time: an alternative to the hazard ratio for the design and analysis of randomized trials with a time-to-event outcome

University College London · MRC Clinical Trials Unit at UCL

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Designs and analyses of clinical trials with a time-to-event outcome almost invariably rely on the hazard ratio to estimate the treatment effect and implicitly, therefore, on the proportional hazards assumption. However, the results of some recent trials indicate that there is no guarantee that the assumption will hold. Here, we describe the use of the restricted mean survival time as a possible alternative tool in the design and analysis of these trials.

Methods

The restricted mean is a measure of average survival from time 0 to a specified time point, and may be estimated as the area under the survival curve up to that point. We consider the design of such trials according to a wide range of possible survival distributions in the control and research arm(s). The distributions are conveniently defined as piecewise exponential distributions and can be specified through piecewise constant hazards and time-fixed or time-dependent hazard ratios. Such designs can embody proportional or non-proportional hazards of the treatment effect.

Citation impact

996
total citations
FWCI
15.16
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100%
References
27
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Statistics
  • Time point
  • Hazard ratio
  • Piecewise
  • Event (particle physics)
  • Proportional hazards model
  • Sample size determination
  • Hazard
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Funding