A Pilot Study Using Registry-Based External Controls for the Cyclosporine Arm of the BENEFIT Study
1Transplant Therapeutics Consortium, Critical Path Institute, Tucson, AZ, 2UNOS, Richmond, VA
Meeting: 2022 American Transplant Congress
Abstract number: 1682
Keywords: Glomerular filtration rate (GFR), Graft function, Kidney transplantation
Topic: Clinical Science » Kidney » 38 - Kidney Immunosuppression: Novel Regimens and Drug Minimization
Session Information
Session Name: Kidney Immunosuppression: Novel Regimens and Drug Minimization
Session Type: Poster Abstract
Date: Tuesday, June 7, 2022
Session Time: 7:00pm-8:00pm
Presentation Time: 7:00pm-8:00pm
Location: Hynes Halls C & D
*Purpose: The Transplant Therapeutics Consortium established a real-world evidence workgroup evaluating the potential of supplementing internal control arms with external controls to understand the impact of new therapies on long-term survival. Collaboratively, UNOS conducted a pilot study to retrospectively simulate the use of a contemporaneous external control group analysis as a supplement to the BENEFIT study’s cyclosporine arm.
*Methods: Phase 1 of the pilot study compared the cyclosporine arm from the BENEFIT study and applied the study’s enrollment criteria to the OPTN registry population transplanted during the same time frame (January 2006-June 2007). Two external control groups were formed based on maintenance immunosuppressive regimen: Group 1 (tacrolimus + mycophenolate mofetil) and Group 2 (cyclosporine + mycophenolate mofetil). Only subjects from non-BENEFIT study centers were included in Group 2 to avoid overlap (bolded-Table 1). Overall and death-censored graft survival, as well as recipient survival were estimated via Kaplan-Meier (KM) methods at 3 years post-transplant.
*Results: Recipient age, race, history of diabetes, and living donor transplants are four covariates with significant imbalances between the BENEFIT study and the historical control groups (bolded-Table 2). Despite baseline differences, KM estimates for patient and graft survival rates were similar to the BENEFIT study cyclosporine arm.
*Conclusions: Applying BENEFIT study enrollment criteria to OPTN registry data resulted in a small, non-overlapping historical cyclosporine arm (n=153) but a substantial alternative historical tacrolimus arm (n=1064). Similar survival rates were found despite an imbalance in four covariates demonstrating the potential of supplementing internal controls with external registry controls for long-term survival. Phase 2 analyses will utilize propensity methods for covariate-balanced survival rate estimates.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Klein A, Stewart D, Toll A, Fitzsimmons WE. A Pilot Study Using Registry-Based External Controls for the Cyclosporine Arm of the BENEFIT Study [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2022; 22 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/a-pilot-study-using-registry-based-external-controls-for-the-cyclosporine-arm-of-the-benefit-study/. Accessed December 3, 2024.« Back to 2022 American Transplant Congress