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 Why are clinicians not embracing the results from pivotal clinical trials in  severe sepsis? A bayesian analysis Kalil AC; Sun JPLoS One  2008[May]; 3 (5): e2291BACKGROUND: Five pivotal clinical trials (Intensive Insulin Therapy; Recombinant  Human Activated Protein C [rhAPC]; Low-Tidal Volume; Low-Dose Steroid; Early  Goal-Directed Therapy [EGDT]) demonstrated mortality reduction in patients with  severe sepsis and expert guidelines have recommended them to clinical practice.  Yet, the adoption of these therapies remains low among clinicians. OBJECTIVES: We  selected these five trials and asked: Question 1--What is the current probability  that the new therapy is not better than the standard of care in my patient with  severe sepsis? Question 2--What is the current probability of reducing the  relative risk of death (RRR) of my patient with severe sepsis by meaningful  clinical thresholds (RRR >15%; >20%; >25%)? METHODS: Bayesian methodologies were  applied to this study. Odds ratio (OR) was considered for Question 1, and RRR was  used for Question 2. We constructed prior distributions (enthusiastic; mild,  moderate, and severe skeptic) based on various effective sample sizes of other  relevant clinical trials (unfavorable evidence). Posterior distributions were  calculated by combining the prior distributions and the data from pivotal trials  (favorable evidence). MAIN FINDINGS: Answer 1--The analysis based on mild skeptic  prior shows beneficial results with the Intensive Insulin, rhAPC, and Low-Tidal  Volume trials, but not with the Low-Dose Steroid and EGDT trials. All trials'  results become unacceptable by the analyses using moderate or severe skeptic  priors. Answer 2--If we aim for a RRR>15%, the mild skeptic analysis shows that  the current probability of reducing death by this clinical threshold is 88% for  the Intensive Insulin, 62-65% for the Low-Tidal Volume, rhAPC, EGDT trials, and  17% for the Low-Dose Steroid trial. The moderate and severe skeptic analyses show  no clinically meaningful reduction in the risk of death for all trials. If we aim  for a RRR >20% or >25%, all probabilities of benefits become lower independent of  the degree of skepticism. CONCLUSIONS: Our clinical threshold analysis offers a  new bedside tool to be directly applied to the care of patients with severe  sepsis. Our results demonstrate that the strength of evidence (statistical and  clinical) is weak for all trials, particularly for the Low-Dose Steroid and EGDT  trials. It is essential to replicate the results of each of these five clinical  trials in confirmatory studies if we want to provide patient care based on  scientifically sound evidence.|*Bayes Theorem[MESH]|*Clinical Trials as Topic[MESH]|*Practice Patterns, Physicians'[MESH]|Data Interpretation, Statistical[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Probability[MESH]|Risk Reduction Behavior[MESH]|Sepsis/*therapy[MESH]
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