Update to the study protocol, including statistical analysis plan, for the multicentre, randomised controlled OuTSMART trial: a combined screening/treatment programme to prevent premature failure of renal transplants due to chronic rejection in patients with HLA antibodies.
Chronic Disease
Data Interpretation, Statistical
Graft Rejection
/ complications
HLA Antigens
/ immunology
Humans
Isoantibodies
/ immunology
Kidney Transplantation
/ adverse effects
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Outcome Assessment, Health Care
Prospective Studies
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Research Design
Sample Size
Graft failure
Human leucocyte antigen antibodies
Immunosuppression
Randomised controlled trial
Renal transplantation
Statistical analysis plan
Time-to-event
Journal
Trials
ISSN: 1745-6215
Titre abrégé: Trials
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101263253
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
05 Aug 2019
05 Aug 2019
Historique:
received:
28
03
2019
accepted:
19
07
2019
entrez:
7
8
2019
pubmed:
7
8
2019
medline:
14
2
2020
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Chronic rejection is the single biggest cause of premature kidney graft failure. HLA antibodies (Ab) are an established prognostic biomarker for premature graft failure so there is a need to test whether treatment decisions based on the presence of the biomarker can alter prognosis. The Optimised TacrolimuS and MMF for HLA Antibodies after Renal Transplantation (OuTSMART) trial combines two elements. Firstly, testing whether a routine screening programme for HLA Ab in all kidney transplant recipients is useful by comparing blinding versus unblinding of HLA Ab status. Secondly, for those found to be HLA Ab+, testing whether the introduction of a standard optimisation treatment protocol can reduce graft failure rates. OuTSMART is a prospective, open-labelled, randomised biomarker-based strategy (hybrid) trial, with two arms stratified by biomarker (HLA Ab) status. The primary outcome was amended from graft failure rates at 3 years to time to graft failure to increase power and require fewer participants to be recruited. Length of follow-up subsequently is variable, with all participants followed up for at least 43 months up to a maximum of 89 months. The primary outcome will be analysed using Cox regression adjusting for stratification factors. Analyses will be according to the intention-to-treat using all participants as randomised. Outcomes will be analysed comparing standard care versus biomarker-led care groups within the HLA Ab+ participants (including those who become HLA Ab+ through re-screening) as well as between HLA-Ab-unblinded and HLA-Ab-blinded groups using all participants. Changes to the primary outcome permit recruitment of fewer participants to achieve the same statistical power. Pre-stating the statistical analysis plan guards against changes to the analysis methods at the point of analysis that might otherwise introduce bias through knowledge of the data. Any deviations from the analysis plan will be justified in the final report. ISRCTN registry, ID: ISRCTN46157828 . Registered on 26 March 2013; EudraCT 2012-004308-36 . Registered on 10 December 2012.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
Chronic rejection is the single biggest cause of premature kidney graft failure. HLA antibodies (Ab) are an established prognostic biomarker for premature graft failure so there is a need to test whether treatment decisions based on the presence of the biomarker can alter prognosis. The Optimised TacrolimuS and MMF for HLA Antibodies after Renal Transplantation (OuTSMART) trial combines two elements. Firstly, testing whether a routine screening programme for HLA Ab in all kidney transplant recipients is useful by comparing blinding versus unblinding of HLA Ab status. Secondly, for those found to be HLA Ab+, testing whether the introduction of a standard optimisation treatment protocol can reduce graft failure rates.
METHODS
METHODS
OuTSMART is a prospective, open-labelled, randomised biomarker-based strategy (hybrid) trial, with two arms stratified by biomarker (HLA Ab) status. The primary outcome was amended from graft failure rates at 3 years to time to graft failure to increase power and require fewer participants to be recruited. Length of follow-up subsequently is variable, with all participants followed up for at least 43 months up to a maximum of 89 months. The primary outcome will be analysed using Cox regression adjusting for stratification factors. Analyses will be according to the intention-to-treat using all participants as randomised. Outcomes will be analysed comparing standard care versus biomarker-led care groups within the HLA Ab+ participants (including those who become HLA Ab+ through re-screening) as well as between HLA-Ab-unblinded and HLA-Ab-blinded groups using all participants.
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
Changes to the primary outcome permit recruitment of fewer participants to achieve the same statistical power. Pre-stating the statistical analysis plan guards against changes to the analysis methods at the point of analysis that might otherwise introduce bias through knowledge of the data. Any deviations from the analysis plan will be justified in the final report.
TRIAL REGISTRATION
BACKGROUND
ISRCTN registry, ID: ISRCTN46157828 . Registered on 26 March 2013; EudraCT 2012-004308-36 . Registered on 10 December 2012.
Identifiants
pubmed: 31383029
doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3602-2
pii: 10.1186/s13063-019-3602-2
pmc: PMC6683506
doi:
Substances chimiques
HLA Antigens
0
Isoantibodies
0
Types de publication
Clinical Trial Protocol
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
476Subventions
Organisme : Department of Health
ID : 11/100/34
Pays : United Kingdom
Organisme : Medical Research Council
ID : MR/J006742/1
Pays : United Kingdom
Organisme : Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation Programme
ID : 11/100/34
Références
Stat Med. 2005 Apr 15;24(7):993-1007
pubmed: 15570623
Transplantation. 2005 Feb 27;79(4):466-75
pubmed: 15729174
Transplantation. 2009 May 27;87(10):1505-13
pubmed: 19461487
Trials. 2014 Jan 21;15:30
pubmed: 24447519
J Nucl Cardiol. 2014 Aug;21(4):686-94
pubmed: 24810431