A Review of EMA Public Assessment Reports where Non-Proportional Hazards were Identified
Florian Klinglmueller, Norbert Benda, Tim Friede, Tobias Fellinger,, Harald Heinzl, Andrew Hooker, Franz Koenig, Tim Mathes, Martin Posch, Florian, Stampfer, Susanne Urach

TL;DR
This review analyzes EMA public assessment reports to understand how non-proportional hazards are identified and addressed in clinical trial analyses, highlighting current practices and gaps in methodology.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of real-world trial analyses involving non-proportional hazards in EMA submissions, including data extraction and a simulation study.
Findings
Most trials used proportional hazards assumptions despite NPH issues.
Some procedures employed methods addressing NPH, like weighted log-rank tests.
Extensive sensitivity analyses and model diagnostics were reported.
Abstract
While well-established methods for time-to-event data are available when the proportional hazards assumption holds, there is no consensus on the best approach under non-proportional hazards. A wide range of parametric and non-parametric methods for testing and estimation in this scenario have been proposed. In this review we identified EMA marketing authorization procedures where non-proportional hazards were raised as a potential issue in the risk-benefit assessment and extract relevant information on trial design and results reported in the corresponding European Assessment Reports (EPARs) available in the database at paediatricdata.eu. We identified 16 Marketing authorization procedures, reporting results on a total of 18 trials. Most procedures covered the authorization of treatments from the oncology domain. For the majority of trials NPH issues were related to a suspected…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRisk and Safety Analysis
