Understanding noninferiority trials Noninferiority trials test whether a new experimental treatment is not unacceptably less efficacious than an active control treatment already in use. With continuous improvements in health technologies, standard care, and clinical outcomes, the incremental benefits of newly developed treatments may be only marginal over existing treatments. Sometimes assigning patients to a placebo is unethical. In such circumstances, there has been increasing emphasis on the use of noninferiority trial designs. Noninferiority trials are more complex to design, conduct, and interpret than typical superiority trials. This paper reviews the concept of noninferiority trials and discusses some important issues related to them
Sometimes the goal of comparing a new treatment with a stan-dard treatment is not to find an approac...
The increasing popularity of noninferiority trials reflects the ongoing efforts to replace existing ...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/143641/1/insr12257.pdfhttps://deepblue...
Noninferiority trials test whether a new experimental treatment is not unacceptably less efficacious...
Clinical investigators are increasingly testing treatments that have the primary benefit of decrease...
Noninferiority trials comparing new treatment with an active standard control are becoming increasin...
Noninferiority trials, in which a new treatment is compared with a standard active treatment, are be...
Superiority trials are conducted to test the hypothesis that a treatment or strategy A is superior t...
Active-control noninferiority trials are being performed with increas-ing frequency when standard pl...
Noninferiority (NI) trials in drug research are used for the purpose of demonstrating that a new tre...
Active-control noninferiority trials test the hypothesis that one intervention is no worse than anot...
A randomized clinical trial (RCT) is the gold standard to evaluate the intended effects of drugs. In...
When designing a noninferiority/equivalence trial, the sponsor intends to show efficacy by demonstra...
With improvements in care over time it becomes harder to improve clinical outcomes in those conditio...
Arandomized controlled trial (RCT) canhave either a superiority design or anoninferiority design. A ...
Sometimes the goal of comparing a new treatment with a stan-dard treatment is not to find an approac...
The increasing popularity of noninferiority trials reflects the ongoing efforts to replace existing ...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/143641/1/insr12257.pdfhttps://deepblue...
Noninferiority trials test whether a new experimental treatment is not unacceptably less efficacious...
Clinical investigators are increasingly testing treatments that have the primary benefit of decrease...
Noninferiority trials comparing new treatment with an active standard control are becoming increasin...
Noninferiority trials, in which a new treatment is compared with a standard active treatment, are be...
Superiority trials are conducted to test the hypothesis that a treatment or strategy A is superior t...
Active-control noninferiority trials are being performed with increas-ing frequency when standard pl...
Noninferiority (NI) trials in drug research are used for the purpose of demonstrating that a new tre...
Active-control noninferiority trials test the hypothesis that one intervention is no worse than anot...
A randomized clinical trial (RCT) is the gold standard to evaluate the intended effects of drugs. In...
When designing a noninferiority/equivalence trial, the sponsor intends to show efficacy by demonstra...
With improvements in care over time it becomes harder to improve clinical outcomes in those conditio...
Arandomized controlled trial (RCT) canhave either a superiority design or anoninferiority design. A ...
Sometimes the goal of comparing a new treatment with a stan-dard treatment is not to find an approac...
The increasing popularity of noninferiority trials reflects the ongoing efforts to replace existing ...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/143641/1/insr12257.pdfhttps://deepblue...