<p> Treatment crossover
refers to the situation in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) where patients
randomised to the control group switch to the experimental treatment. This
leads to biased estimates of treatment effects if crossover is not
appropriately controlled for. Several crossover adjustment methods are
available, but previous research has shown that the optimal adjustment method
depends upon the characteristics of the trial [1]. </p>
<p> This study applies
crossover adjustment methods to an RCT comparing trametinib to chemotherapy in
patients with BRAFV600E/K mutation-positive advanced or metastatic melanoma
(NCT01245062), and investigates which adjustment method best fits this case
study. Patients enrolled in the METRIC clinical trial were randomised 2:1 to
receive trametinib 2 mg once daily or chemotherapy (DTIC or paclitaxel). There
were 273 patients in the primary efficacy population (trametinib, n = 178,
chemotherapy, n = 95) and 64 (67.4%) chemotherapy control group patients
switched onto the experimental treatment.</p>
History
Ethics
There is no personal data or any that requires ethical approval
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