A standardization approach to compare treatment safety and effectiveness outcomes between clinical trials and real‐world populations in psoriasis — Zenas Z N Yiu (2019) | RDL Network
A standardization approach to compare treatment safety and effectiveness outcomes between clinical trials and real‐world populations in psoriasis
Article 2019 en
Authors
ZY
Zenas Z N Yiu
KM
K.J. Mason
JB
Juliet N. Barker
Abstract
1 min read
Our results suggest that RCTs of biologic therapies in patients with psoriasis are not fully representative of the real-world population, but this lack of external validity does not account for the efficacy-effectiveness gap. What's already known about this topic? Patients with psoriasis who would not be eligible for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating biologic therapies have a greater risk of serious adverse events and lower treatment effectiveness than patients who would have been eligible. What does this study add? Baseline patient characteristics were shown to be predictive of whether a patient would have been eligible for enrolment in an RCT for psoriasis biologic therapy. We did not find any efficacy-effectiveness gap between the sample representative of the real-world population of patients with psoriasis and the sample representative of the RCT population. Factors outside of baseline patient characteristics, such as observer effect and higher adherence in RCTs, may be more influential in any efficacy-effectiveness gap between trial and real-world populations of patients with psoriasis.
Heidi Taipale, Johannes Schneider‐Thoma, Justo Pinzón-Espinosa, Joaquim Raduà, Orestis Efthimiou, Christiaan H. Vinkers, Ellenor Mittendorfer‐Rutz, Narcı́s Cardoner, Luís Pintor, Antti Tanskanen, Anneka Tomlinson, Paolo Fusar‐Poli, Andrea Cipriani, Eduard Vieta, Stefan Leucht, Jari Tiihonen, Jurjen J. Luykx
K.J. Mason, Juliet N. Barker, Kay Hogan Smith, Philip Hampton, Mark Lunt, Kathleen McElhone, Richard Warren, Zenas Z N Yiu, Christopher Em Griffiths, A. David Burden
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