1. Years-needed-to-treat to add 1 year of life: a new metric to estimate treatment effects in randomized trials.
- Author
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Levy WC, Mozaffarian D, Linker DT, Kenyon KW, Cleland JG, Komajda M, Remme WJ, Torp-Pedersen C, Metra M, and Poole-Wilson PA
- Subjects
- Adrenergic beta-Antagonists administration & dosage, Carbazoles administration & dosage, Carvedilol, Confidence Intervals, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Metoprolol administration & dosage, Odds Ratio, Propanolamines administration & dosage, Survival Rate trends, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Adrenergic beta-Antagonists therapeutic use, Carbazoles therapeutic use, Heart Failure drug therapy, Heart Failure mortality, Life Expectancy trends, Metoprolol therapeutic use, Propanolamines therapeutic use
- Abstract
Aims: A standard metric to estimate absolute treatment effects is numbers-needed-to-treat (NNT), which implicitly assumes that all benefits reverse at trial-end. However, in-trial survival benefits typically do not reverse until long after trial-end, so that NNT will substantially underestimate lifetime benefits., Methods and Results: We developed a new concept, years-needed-to-treat (YNT) to add 1 year of life, that quantifies the expected average life expectancy for two treatments including the estimated years of life remaining post-trial. Numbers-needed-to-treat and YNT were calculated in the COMET trial, in which carvedilol vs. metoprolol tartrate resulted in 17% lower mortality over 4.8 years. A multivariate Cox model was used to predict survival. Remaining years of life were estimated using the mortality-life-table method. At trial-end, survival was 9% higher in the carvedilol arm. Assuming that patients remained on the same therapy post-trial, the average total years of life for carvedilol vs. metoprolol were 10.63 +/- 0.19 vs. 9.48 +/- 0.18 (P < 0.0001) or 1.15 (95% confidence interval 0.64-1.66) additional years of life. The YNT was 9.2, indicating that 9.2 person-years of treatment added 1 person-year of life, compared with NNT of 59., Conclusion: Compared with NNT, the YNT method more accurately accounts for potential long-term benefits of interventions in randomized trials.
- Published
- 2009
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