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BackgroundClinical trials of treatments for serious infections commonly use the primary endpoint of all-cause mortality. However, many trial participants survive their infection and this endpoint may not truly reflect important benefits and risks of therapy. The win ratio uses a hierarchical composite endpoint that can incorporate and prioritize outcome measures by relative clinical importance.MethodsThe win ratio methodology was applied post hoc to outcomes observed in the MERINO trial, which compared piperacillin-tazobactam with meropenem. We quantified the win ratio with a primary hierarchical composite endpoint, including all-cause mortality, microbiological relapse, and secondary infection. A win ratio of 1 would correspond to no difference between the 2 antibiotics, while a ratio <1 favors meropenem. Further analyses were performed to calculate the win odds and to introduce a continuous outcome variable in order to reduce ties.ResultsWith the hierarchy of all-cause mortality, microbiological relapse, and secondary infection, the win ratio estimate was 0.40 (95% confidence interval [CI], .22-.71]; P = .002), favoring meropenem over piperacillin-tazobactam. However, 73.4% of the pairs were tied due to the small proportion of events. The win odds, a modification of the win ratio accounting for ties, was 0.79 (95% CI, .68-.92). The addition of length of stay to the primary composite greatly minimized the number of ties (4.6%) with a win ratio estimate of 0.77 (95% CI, .60-.99; P = .04).ConclusionsThe application of the win ratio methodology to the MERINO trial data illustrates its utility and feasibility for use in antimicrobial trials.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1093/cid/ciae050

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2024-06-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

78

Pages

1482 - 1489

Total pages

7

Addresses

U, Q, , C, e, n, t, r, e, , f, o, r, , C, l, i, n, i, c, a, l, , R, e, s, e, a, r, c, h, ,, , T, h, e, , U, n, i, v, e, r, s, i, t, y, , o, f, , Q, u, e, e, n, s, l, a, n, d, ,, , B, r, i, s, b, a, n, e, ,, , Q, u, e, e, n, s, l, a, n, d, ,, , A, u, s, t, r, a, l, i, a, .

Keywords

MERINO Trial Investigators, Humans, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Bacteremia, Escherichia coli Infections, Klebsiella Infections, Thienamycins, Ceftriaxone, Penicillanic Acid, Piperacillin, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Treatment Outcome, Aged, Middle Aged, Female, Male, Piperacillin, Tazobactam Drug Combination, Meropenem