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Do patient characteristics matter when calculating sample size for eczema clinical trials?

Do patient characteristics matter when calculating sample size for eczema clinical trials?
Do patient characteristics matter when calculating sample size for eczema clinical trials?
Background: The Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure (POEM) is the core outcome instrument recommended for measuring patient-reported atopic eczema symptoms in clinical trials. To ensure that the statistical significance of clinical trial results is meaningful, trials are often designed by specifying the target difference in the primary outcome as part of the sample size calculation. One method used to specify the target difference is a score that corresponds to a standardized effect size.Objectives: to assess how the standardized effect size of POEM scores vary across age, gender, ethnicity and disease severity.
Methods: This study combined data from five UK-based randomized clinical trials of eczema treatments in order to assess differences in self-reported eczema symptoms (POEM) corresponding to a standardized effect size (0.5 SD of baseline POEM scores) across age, gender, ethnicity and disease severity.Results: POEM scores corresponding to 0.5 SD(baseline) were remarkably consistent across participants of varying ages, gender, ethnicity and disease severity from datasets of five UK trials in children (range 2.99-3.45).Conclusions: This study provides information that can support those designing clinical trials to determine their sample size and can aid individuals interpreting trial results. Further exploration of differences in populations beyond the United Kingdom is needed.
2690-442X
e42
Howells, L
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Gran, S
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Chalmers, J R
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Stuart, B
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Santer, M
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Bradshaw, L.
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Gaunt, D M
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Ridd, M J
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Gerbens, L A A
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Spuls, P I
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Huang, C
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Francis, N. A.
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Thomas, K. S.
d44d03a0-0de2-4232-bb5f-1746587a02ca
et al.
Howells, L
d593a0ff-e684-45ac-8dcc-bc497fdae878
Gran, S
c1e36f79-0398-43f5-a93c-c3329fa3a23c
Chalmers, J R
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Stuart, B
626862fc-892b-4f6d-9cbb-7a8d7172b209
Santer, M
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Bradshaw, L.
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Gaunt, D M
ce8fd124-f5d3-42e5-aee5-9932c30ec879
Ridd, M J
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Gerbens, L A A
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Spuls, P I
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Huang, C
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Francis, N. A.
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Thomas, K. S.
d44d03a0-0de2-4232-bb5f-1746587a02ca

Howells, L, Gran, S, Stuart, B, Santer, M, Bradshaw, L., Huang, C, Francis, N. A. and Thomas, K. S. , et al. (2021) Do patient characteristics matter when calculating sample size for eczema clinical trials? Skin Health and Disease Open Access, 1 (3), e42. (doi:10.1002/ski2.42).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: The Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure (POEM) is the core outcome instrument recommended for measuring patient-reported atopic eczema symptoms in clinical trials. To ensure that the statistical significance of clinical trial results is meaningful, trials are often designed by specifying the target difference in the primary outcome as part of the sample size calculation. One method used to specify the target difference is a score that corresponds to a standardized effect size.Objectives: to assess how the standardized effect size of POEM scores vary across age, gender, ethnicity and disease severity.
Methods: This study combined data from five UK-based randomized clinical trials of eczema treatments in order to assess differences in self-reported eczema symptoms (POEM) corresponding to a standardized effect size (0.5 SD of baseline POEM scores) across age, gender, ethnicity and disease severity.Results: POEM scores corresponding to 0.5 SD(baseline) were remarkably consistent across participants of varying ages, gender, ethnicity and disease severity from datasets of five UK trials in children (range 2.99-3.45).Conclusions: This study provides information that can support those designing clinical trials to determine their sample size and can aid individuals interpreting trial results. Further exploration of differences in populations beyond the United Kingdom is needed.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 April 2021
Published date: 1 September 2021
Additional Information: © 2021 The Authors. Skin Health and Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Association of Dermatologists.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475569
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475569
ISSN: 2690-442X
PURE UUID: 7c6aac16-5b60-4aa8-b5b4-df84a9cce2af
ORCID for B Stuart: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5432-7437
ORCID for M Santer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7264-5260
ORCID for C Huang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6898-8340
ORCID for N. A. Francis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8939-7312

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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2023 17:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:58

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Contributors

Author: L Howells
Author: S Gran
Author: J R Chalmers
Author: B Stuart ORCID iD
Author: M Santer ORCID iD
Author: L. Bradshaw
Author: D M Gaunt
Author: M J Ridd
Author: L A A Gerbens
Author: P I Spuls
Author: C Huang ORCID iD
Author: N. A. Francis ORCID iD
Author: K. S. Thomas
Corporate Author: et al.

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