Defining the noninferiority margin and analysing noninferiority: An overview

Publication date

2017

Authors

Althunian, Turki A. I.
de Boer, Anthonius
Groenwold, RHHISNI 0000000394374611
Klungel, Olaf H.ISNI 0000000390199414

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Noninferiority trials are used to assess whether the effect of a new drug is not worse than an active comparator by more than a noninferiority margin. If the difference between the new drug and the active comparator does not exceed this prespecified margin, noninferiority can be concluded. This margin must be specified based on clinical and statistical reasoning; however, it is considered as one of the most challenging steps in the design of noninferiority trials. Regulators recommend that the margin should be defined based on the historical evidence of the active comparator (the latter is often the well-established standard treatment of the disease), which can be performed by different approaches. There are several factors and assumptions that need to be accounted for during the process of defining the margin and during the analysis of noninferiority. Three methods are commonly used to analyse noninferiority trials: the fixed-margin method; the point-estimate method; and the synthesis method. This article provides an overview of analysing noninferiority and choosing the noninferiority margin.

Keywords

biostatistics, clinical trials, drug regulation, methodology, randomized controlled trials, Taverne, Pharmacology, Pharmacology (medical), Journal Article

Citation

Althunian, T A I, de Boer, A, Groenwold, R H H & Klungel, O H 2017, 'Defining the noninferiority margin and analysing noninferiority : An overview', British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, vol. 83, no. 8, pp. 1636-1642. https://doi.org/10.1111/bcp.13280