Abstract
Background Surrogate
endpoint trials test strategies more efficiently but are accompanied
by uncertainty about the relationship between changes in surrogate
markers and clinical outcomes.
Methods and Results
We identified cardiovascular trials with primary surrogate endpoints
published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet, and JAMA:
Journal of the American Medical Association from 1990 to 2011 and
determined the trends in publication of surrogate endpoint trials and
the success of the trials in meeting their primary endpoints. We
tracked for publication of clinical outcome trials on the
interventions tested in surrogate trials. We screened 3016 articles
and identified 220 surrogate endpoint trials. From the total of 220
surrogate trials, 157 (71.4%) were positive for their primary
endpoint. Only 59 (26.8%) surrogate trials had a subsequent clinical
outcomes trial. Among these 59 trials, 24 outcomes trial results
validated the positive surrogates, whereas 20 subsequent outcome
trials were negative following positive results on a surrogate. We
identified only 3 examples in which the surrogate trial was negative
but a subsequent outcomes trial was conducted and showed benefit.
Findings were consistent in a sample cohort of 383 screened articles
inclusive of 37 surrogate endpoint trials from 6 other high‐impact
journals.
Conclusions Although
cardiovascular surrogate outcomes trials frequently show superiority
of the tested intervention, they are infrequently followed by a
prominent outcomes trial. When there was a high‐profile clinical
outcomes study, nearly half of the positive surrogate trials were not
validated. Cardiovascular surrogate outcome trials may be more
appropriate for excluding benefit from the patient perspective than
for identifying it.
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