American Heart Journal
Volume 139, Issue 6 , Pages 952-961, June 2000

Subgroups, treatment effects, and baseline risks: Some lessons from major cardiovascular trials

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

From athe Institute of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, and SOCAR Cardiac Research Ltd; and bthe Department of Medicine, University of Toronto; The Clinical Epidemiology and Health Services Research Program, University of Toronto (Sunnybrook and Women’s College Unit), and the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences

Received 5 October 1999; accepted 21 February 2000.

Abstract 

Background The objective of this study was to determine how subgroup analyses are performed in large randomized trials of cardiovascular pharmacotherapy. Methods and Results We reviewed 67 randomized, double-blind, controlled trials involving pharmacotherapy in at least 1000 patients with unstable angina, myocardial infarction, left ventricular dysfunction, or heart failure with clinical outcomes as primary end points, published between 1980 and 1997. Nine had no subgroup analyses but 43 reported on 5 or more subgroups and 31 reported subgroups without formal statistical tests for treatment-subgroup interactions. In most trials, a rationale for subgroup selection was missing. All but 6 focused on single-factor subgroups. Conclusions Trial subgroups should ideally be defined a priori on 2 bases: single-factor subgroups with a strong rationale for biological response modification and multifactorial prognostic subgroups defined from baseline risks. However, single-factor subgroup analyses are often reported without a supporting rationale or formal statistical tests for interactions. We suggest that clinicians should interpret published subgroup-specific variations in treatment effects skeptically unless there is a prespecified rationale and a significant treatment-subgroup interaction. (Am Heart J 2000;139:952-61.)

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 Reprint requests: C. David Naylor, MD, MSB 2109, 1 King’s College Circle, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8.

PII: S0002-8703(00)57126-9

doi:10.1067/mhj.2000.106610

American Heart Journal
Volume 139, Issue 6 , Pages 952-961, June 2000