1. The Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Rationale, Design, and Lessons Learned
- Author
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Yusen, Roger D, Criner, Gerard J, Sternberg, Alice L, Au, David H, Fuhlbrigge, Anne L, Albert, Richard K, Casaburi, Richard, Stoller, James K, Harrington, Kathleen F, Cooper, J Allen D, Diaz, Philip, Gay, Steven, Kanner, Richard, MacIntyre, Neil, Martinez, Fernando J, Piantadosi, Steven, Sciurba, Frank, Shade, David, Stibolt, Thomas, Tonascia, James, Wise, Robert, Bailey, William C, Sampong, Ernestina, Sloan, Karin, Wagner, Ashley, Anderson, Susan, Moy, Marilyn, Okunbor, Osarenoma, Marlow, Scott, Meli, Yvonne, Rice, Richard, Aboussouan, Loutfi S, Castele, Robert, Parambil, Joseph, Khatri, Sumita, Pande, Aman, Zein, Joe, Olbrych, Thomas, Alkins, Stephan, Jocko, Christine, Rahaghi, Franck, Barton, Jean, Underwood, Jennifer, Make, Barry, Davies, John, Mularski, Richard, Naleway, Allison, Vertrees, Sarah, Porszasz, Janos, Walker, Peggy, Indelicato, Renee, Specht, Lennard, Ellstrom, Kathleen, Portillo, Jamie, Horak, David, Tiep, Brian, Barnett, Mary, Drake, Janice, Rittinger, Mahasti, Compton, Rachael, Miller, Scott, Panos, Ralph J, Lach, Laura A, Criner, Gerard, Grabianowski, Carla, Cordova, Francis, Desai, Parag, Krachman, Samuel, Mamary, James, Marchetti, Nathaniel, Satti, Aditi, Mumm, Eileen, Vega-Olivo, Michelle, Hua, Jenny, Tauch, Vanna, Criner, Lii-Yoong, Jacobs, Michael, Rising, Peter, Simonelli, Paul, Mitchell, Michele, Lammi, Matthew, Romaine, Connie, Lee, Howard, Ianacone, Mary, Scharf, Steven, Bell-Farrell, Wanda, Mador, M Jeffery, Rahman, Ayesha, Zaman, Mumtaz, Hill, Lisa, and Platt, Alec
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Female ,Geography ,Humans ,Long-Term Care ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Oxygen ,Oxygen Inhalation Therapy ,Patient Admission ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Quality of Life ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Time Factors ,United States ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,hypoxemia ,oxygen ,randomized controlled trial ,survival ,LOTT Research Group * ,LOTT Research Group ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
The Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial demonstrated that long-term supplemental oxygen did not reduce time to hospital admission or death for patients who have stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and resting and/or exercise-induced moderate oxyhemoglobin desaturation, nor did it provide benefit for any other outcome measured in the trial. Nine months after initiation of patient screening, after randomization of 34 patients to treatment, a trial design amendment broadened the eligible population, expanded the primary outcome, and reduced the goal sample size. Within a few years, the protocol underwent minor modifications, and a second trial design amendment lowered the required sample size because of lower than expected treatment group crossover rates. After 5.5 years of recruitment, the trial met its amended sample size goal, and 1 year later, it achieved its follow-up goal. The process of publishing the trial results brought renewed scrutiny of the study design and the amendments. This article expands on the previously published design and methods information, provides the rationale for the amendments, and gives insight into the investigators' decisions about trial conduct. The story of the Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial may assist investigators in future trials, especially those that seek to assess the efficacy and safety of long-term oxygen therapy. Clinical trial registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT00692198).
- Published
- 2018