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Desirability of Outcome Ranking for Status Epilepticus: A Benefit-Risk Approach to Design and Analyses of Clinical SE Trials.
Chamberlain, James M; Kapur, Jaideep; Silbergleit, Robert S; Elm, Jordan J; Rosenthal, Eric S; Bleck, Thomas P; Shinnar, Shlomo; Zetabchi, Shahriar; Evans, Scott R.
Afiliação
  • Chamberlain JM; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Kapur J; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Silbergleit RS; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Elm JJ; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Rosenthal ES; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Bleck TP; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Shinnar S; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Zetabchi S; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
  • Evans SR; From the Division of Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), Children's National Hospital; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine (J.M.C.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (J.K.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Emergency Medicine (R.S.S.),
Neurology ; 101(16): e1633-e1639, 2023 10 17.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37580166
ABSTRACT
Most clinical trials of treatment efficacy evaluate benefits and harms separately. Investigators generally rate the primary outcome of a trial with a binary outcome measure and consider harms separately as adverse events. This approach fails to recognize finer gradations of patient response, correlations between benefits and harms, and the overall effects on individual patients. For example, in status epilepticus trials, efficacy is often defined as the absence of clinically apparent seizures with recovery of consciousness. Such an efficacy outcome fails to recognize that some causes of status epilepticus, such as subarachnoid hemorrhage or stroke, may not be accompanied by return of consciousness, and the need to intubate a patient may be classified as treatment failure even if status was successfully terminated. The Desirability of Outcome Ranking (DOOR) method uses a different approach. The DOOR method involves comparing the experiences of trial participants in different treatment arms by the desirability of the overall patient outcome. Using status epilepticus treatment as an example, a patient who experiences successful termination of status epilepticus but with major side effects would have a less desirable outcome than a patient with treatment success and minor side effects, who in turn would have a less desirable outcome than a patient with treatment success but no side effects. This is a patient-centered approach because it considers treatment efficacy in the context of the costs borne by the patient, for example, toxicity in achieving efficacy. Thus, DOOR considers both the benefits and harms to individual patients in assessing the outcome of a clinical trial. In this article, we present the rationale for the use of DOOR, the issues involved in the development of and statistical analyses of an ordinal outcome, and an example of the potential application of the DOOR method to a clinical trial of convulsive status epilepticus.
Assuntos

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Estado Epiléptico Tipo de estudo: Etiology_studies / Risk_factors_studies Limite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: Neurology Ano de publicação: 2023 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Estado Epiléptico Tipo de estudo: Etiology_studies / Risk_factors_studies Limite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: Neurology Ano de publicação: 2023 Tipo de documento: Article
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