1 / 39

Clinical Trial Commentary

Clinical Trial Commentary. GUSTO V. Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic Dr Robert Califf Professor of Cardiology Associate Vice Chancellor for Clinical Research at Duke University.

yoland
Download Presentation

Clinical Trial Commentary

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Clinical Trial Commentary GUSTO V Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic Dr Robert Califf Professor of Cardiology Associate Vice Chancellor for Clinical Research at Duke University

  2. N=16,588 Patients: ST ­, Sxs < 6 hours Study design GUSTO V Randomization Standard-Dose Reteplase (10 + 10 U Double Bolus) Abciximab + Low-Dose Reteplase (5 + 5 U Double Bolus) Heparin: 5000 U 1000 U/hr (800 U/hr for <70 kg) Heparin: 60 U/kg (max 5000 U) 7 U/kg-hr

  3. Endpoints GUSTO V • Primary • mortality (all-cause) by 30 days • Secondary • mortality (30-day) or non-fatal disabling stroke (in-hospital or 7-day) • hemorrhagic stroke (in-hospital or 7-day) • mortality by 1 year • reinfarction • coronary revascularization • other prespecified complications of MI

  4. Statistical methods GUSTO V • Superiority Testing: • one-sided Type I error < 2.5% for control mortality rates ranging from 5 - 9%. • approximately 80% power to detect 15% reduction if control mortality rate = 7.4% • Non-Inferiority Testing: • less than 10% relative increase in mortality - upper bound of 95% CI for relative risk £ 1.10 • one-sided Type I error ranges from 2.051 - 2.627% for control mortality rates ranging from 5 - 9%

  5. Odds Ratio = 0.948 (0.832 - 1.081) p = 0.43 Reteplase Better Abciximab + Reteplase Better Relative Risk & 95% CI Primary endpoint GUSTO V Non-inferiority boundary Upper bound of 95% confidence interval = 1.076

  6. p < 0.0001 Reinfarction GUSTO V

  7. All p-values < 0.0001 Revascularization GUSTO V

  8. Non-fatal complications GUSTO V • “It looked like, if one starts to consider the whole gestalt of non-fatal complications, that there was a very consistent and important reduction of these endpoints for the combination.” Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic

  9. Bleeding GUSTO V Abciximab Reteplase + Reteplase N = 8260 N = 8328 EENT (%) 0.1 0.6 Pulmonary (%) 0.1 0.3 Cardiac (%) 0.1 0.1 Retroperitoneal (%) 0.1 0.1 Genitourinary (%) 0.1 0.4 Sheath Site (%) 0.7 0.4 Gastrointestinal (%) 0.4 1.9 Other Puncture Site (%) 0.3 0.6 Surgical (%) 0.4 0.3

  10. Doubts on non-inferiority GUSTO V • Accusation: We just cooked up this non-inferiority thing, mortality reduction is all that counts. • Califf • Rebuttal: The overall mortality was extremely low, and the improvement in the combination arm was flanked by other improvements. • Topol

  11. Beyond 30 days GUSTO V • “We have to start getting beyond just life or death at 30 days. […] The SHOCK trial taught us a big lesson, that you don't always see the benefit of an aggressive strategy for cardiogenic shock at 30 days, in fact you see a lot more impact of this at 1 year. […] I think we may well see the same thing as far as 1 year mortality in GUSTO V. Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic

  12. An entirely new strategy GUSTO V • “We did do what we had hypothesized we could do. Which is develop an entirely new strategy, not one that was red clot dissolving, to achieve a very impressive endpoint of mortality at 30 days, and beyond that.” Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic

  13. Mortality results are biased? GUSTO V • Accusation: The smart doctors just siphoned off the high-risk patients for direct angioplasty. • Califf • Rebuttal: Many of the patients were outside the US, where cath-based reperfusion isn't the standard mode. But there doesn't seem to be a tendency towards low-risk patients in the trial. • Topol

  14. Europe 9712 Belgium 181 Finland 107 France 404 Germany 2511 Great Britain 1253 Ireland 12 Italy 1181 Netherlands 1310 Norway 143 Poland 1770 Portugal 88 Spain 618 Sweden 84 Switzerland 50 Americas 4194 Argentina 36 Canada 1240 United States 2918 Other 2682 Australia 509 Israel 1973 South Africa 200 Final enrollment GUSTO V

  15. The wrong lytic? GUSTO V • Accusation: Reteplase is a weak lytic and was a bad choice for the trial. • Califf • Rebuttal: We have no head-to-head comparative data. Without the head-to-head it's too much speculation. • Topol

  16. Non-fatal MI questions GUSTO V • Accusation: The non-fatal MI wasn’t strictly defined and isn't useful. How can you have a big difference in MI but not mortality? • Califf • Rebuttal: After mortality, death of heart tissue is the most important thing. These were major clinical events linked to other complications seen in the trial. • That it was only day 7 and non-blinded data are legitimate critiques. • Topol

  17. CURE trial comparison GUSTO V GUSTO 5 CURE Reteplase + Aspirin +Reteplase Abciximab RR Aspirin Clopidogrel RR Death 5.9 5.6 0.95 5.5 5.1 0.92 MI 3.5 2.3 0.67 6.7 5.2 0.77 Stroke 0.3 0.2 0.76 1.4 1.2 0.85 Transfusion > 2U 3.7 5.0 1.38 2.2 2.8 1.28

  18. Importance of reinfarction GUSTO V • GUSTO I and III showed a marked difference in 1 year survival for those who had no reinfarction in 30 days vs those who did. • More reason to suspect we should see an even stronger difference in mortality at 1 year. • Topol

  19. Transfusions GUSTO V • "But the question is death of heart tissue or death of patient vs a transfusion. When you look at the net there that maybe you're better off reducing the death of the patient or the death of heart tissue and you have to bite the bullet with transfusion.” Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic

  20. Bleeding GUSTO V • Bleeding is clustered in the elderly, female, and light-weight patients. • Different anti-coagulants may lower this bleeding even further. • Topol

  21. Problems with the trial GUSTO V • The lack of mortality reduction was disappointing. • GUSTO I reduced mortality by > 14% and some still said we didn't reduce mortality. • There are always nay-sayers for any large trial. • Topol

  22. Time will tell GUSTO V • "The only way to know what you've done, […] is how the trial's data are adopted in practice. Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic

  23. Embracing the results GUSTO V • The costs of the combination therapy should not be very different from the standard so that isn't fueling the controversy. • I would think it should be viewed as a good thing: • reduced non-fatal endpoints • discriminates the population at risk of bleeding • Bleeding didn't override the clinical benefits • This should be embraced for certain patients. • Topol

  24. Apply it to practice? GUSTO V • “I'd like to see any better data on how to treat patients today.” • There's a cath-lab strategy, but often there is a delay, and most places don't have it available. • It may not be for all patients. (Tough to advocate for patients with small MIs) • Topol

  25. Cooking up the cocktail. GUSTO V • Reteplase currently comes in two vials. So you use just one with the abciximab. • Costs about $300 more than reteplase or tenecteplase alone. • There are several hospitals that have done it for the last year, even withou the GUSTO V data. • Topol

  26. Who to treat GUSTO V • Patients with significant MIs • Patients 75 years old or younger • If it is a relatively small MI, I probably would NOT bother using combination therapy. • Topol

  27. ASSENT III GUSTO V • Assent III should offer some supporting evidence. Not as large a trial, but it should shed further light on the question. • Califf

  28. Faster treatment GUSTO V • The 90 minute to 2 hour delay getting to cath lab is the big question. Would we be better off having drugs working en route? • Topol • The great hope is that we can organize things to treat people quickly and open the artery and the cath-lab is proving where you want to be in the long run. • Califf

  29. Reservations GUSTO V • “I think it's a matter of getting organized and absorbing the data some more and seeing whether ASSENT 3 confirms it. I think it is so close temporally that I'm not quite ready to jump on it at this point." Dr Robert Califf Professor of Cardiology Associate Vice Chancellor for Clinical Research at Duke University

  30. Other combinations GUSTO V • All combinations are possible, but you can't adopt any combination until you have some solid evidence with a large-scale trial. • GUSTO Vis favorable on balance, but it is tenuous, a small difference. • Strong data is needed on other combinations before we can advocate them. • Califf

  31. Intracranial hemorrhage GUSTO V Abciximab +Reteplase Odds Ratio & 95% CI Reteplase Intracranialhemorrhage rate 0.6% 0.6% Age 0.045 < 45 0.2% 0.1% 0.021 > 45 - 55 0.3% 0.1% > 55 - 65 0.4% 0.4% > 65 - 75 1.0% 0.8% > 75 1.1% 2.1% 0.1 1 10 Abciximab +Reteplase Better ReteplaseBetter

  32. Lack of progress on ICH GUSTO V • Trial didn't show any increase in ICH overall. But it remains a problem with the elderly. It doesn't look like a great strategy for the elderly. • Topol • Most frustrating to me is that we have made no progress on ICH. We still don't know how to pick out people at risk. • Califf

  33. Compared to other trials GUSTO V ICH Rates N = 18,495 15,059 16,949 15,078 16,588

  34. The naysayers GUSTO V • "The most frustrating thing is to see that no matter what trial you do, no matter what the findings are, they are very harshly criticized by some. And after a while it makes you not want to be engaged in clinical trials. " Dr Eric Topol Provost and Chief Academic Officer Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Cleveland Clinic

  35. Stepwise progress GUSTO V • We need to remember that AMI is still the developed world's number 1 cause of death and disability. • Anything we do to chip away at the problem is a step-wise advance. • Huge reductions in mortality aren’t always possible. • Topol

  36. Fast track publication GUSTO V • With the agents already available, getting the information out to the medical community quickly and accurately was important. • Topol • Making sure things get published before all the rumors start flying around is a laudable goal. • Califf

  37. GUSTO V trial review GUSTO V • Dr Eric Topol • Two thumbs up • “I'm not saying that's what the findings necessarily support but I think in terms of the design."

  38. Importance of non-inferiority GUSTO V • “We want to have therapies that have fewer side effects, or are easier to give, or cheaper. Hopefully a combination of all of those. In many cases you may not have a reduction in mortality but you sure want to make sure that you don’t create an excess mortality." Dr Robert Califf Professor of Cardiology Associate Vice Chancellor for Clinical Research at Duke University

  39. GUSTO V trial review GUSTO V • Dr Robert Califf • Two thumbs up • "A somewhat biased two thumbs up on both accounts."

More Related