首页|Evaluating treatment effect modifiers using data from randomized two-sequence, two-period crossover clinical trials: application to a diabetes study

Evaluating treatment effect modifiers using data from randomized two-sequence, two-period crossover clinical trials: application to a diabetes study

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Type 2 diabetes is known as a heterogeneous disease with diverse pathophysiology. The identification of treatment effect modifiers for personalized medicine, however, has been difficult in basic research due to complex biological mechanisms related to various genetic and nongenetic factors, and in clinical research due to confounding bias and limited sample sizes. In this paper, we focus on a two-sequence, two-period crossover (CO) clinical trial of type 2 diabetes with baseline markers as a new strategy for analyzing treatment effect modification that allows confounding elimination and efficiency enhancement by within-patient treatment comparison. We provide a framework for statistical analysis of treatment effect modification and develop methods for testing for treatment effect modification and estimating individualized predictors of treatment differences in the CO trial with limited sample size. Numerical assessments showed that the efficiency of the proposed CO analysis was substantially higher than the standard analysis based on parallel-group comparison in these analyses. Application to the diabetes trial showed that markers based on gene expression in peripheral blood cells before pharmacological treatment significantly modified the effect of the treatment on the response and that marker-based predictors produced two subgroups of patients for whom different treatments should be recommended.

crossover designsstatistical modellingtreatment effect modifierstreatment individualization

Ryo Emoto、Masataka Igeta、Kota Matsui、Kiyoaki Ishii、Toshinari Takamura、Shigeyuki Matsui

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Department of Biostatistics, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Aichi, Japan

Department of Biostatistics, Hyogo College of Medicine, Hyogo, Japan

Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Ishikawa, Japan##Department of Musculoskeletal Disease, National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Aichi, Japan

Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Ishikawa, Japan

Department of Biostatistics, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Aichi, Japan##Department of Interdisciplinary Statistical Mathematics, The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Tokyo, Japan

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2025

Journal of the royal statistical society, Series C. Applied statistics
  • 30