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When evaluating the real-world treatment effect, the analysis based on randomized clinical trials (RCTs) often introduces generalizability bias due to the difference in risk factors between the trial participants and the real-world patient population. This problem of lack of generalizability associated with the RCT-only analysis can be addressed by leveraging observational studies with large sample sizes that are representative of the real-world population. A set of novel statistical methods, termed "genRCT", for improving the generalizability of the trial has been developed using calibration weighting, which enforces the covariates balance between the RCT and observational study. This paper aims to review statistical methods for generalizing the RCT findings by harnessing information from large observational studies that represent real-world patients. Specifically, we discuss the choices of data sources and variables to meet key theoretical assumptions and principles. We introduce and compare estimation methods for continuous, binary, and survival endpoints. We showcase the use of the R package genRCT through a case study that estimates the average treatment effect of adjuvant chemotherapy for the stage 1B non-small cell lung patients represented by a large cancer registry.
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Dasom Lee
Korea Aerospace Research Institute
Shu Yang
Shenzhen University
Mark F. Berry
Stanford Medicine
Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics
Stanford University
Duke University
North Carolina State University
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Lee et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6ffe7b6db643587679912 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/10543406.2024.2333136