Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the association between the treatment effects on progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) for previously untreated, unresectable or metastatic melanoma. METHODS: A systematic literature review identified eligible trials reporting PFS and OS. Bivariate random effects meta-analysis (BRMA) was performed to estimate the correlation between the hazard ratios (HRs) of OS (HR(OS)) and PFS (HR(PFS)), and sample size-weighted linear regression (WLR) was used to estimate a surrogacy equation which predict the HR(OS) from the HR(PFS). Strength of the correlation obtained from BRMA and WLR models was assessed using published guidelines. Predictive performance of the WLR model was also evaluated internally by leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV) and externally against data from newly published trials. Further analyses included adjustments for BRAF mutation status, and restriction to phase III trials or trials evaluating immune checkpoint or BRAF/MEK inhibitors, without crossover or crossover-adjusted, or meeting proportional hazards assumption. RESULTS: BRMA and WLR estimated a correlation of 0.74 (95%CI: 0.51-0.87) and 0.81 (95%CI: 0.58-0.92), respectively. The estimated surrogacy equation derived from the WLR was lnHR(OS) = -0.05 + 0.50 × lnHR(PFS) with a statistically non-significant intercept (95% CI: -0.14 - 0.03) and a statistically significant slope (95% CI: 0.35 - 0.65). The surrogacy equation derived from the BRMA was lnHR(OS) = -0.11 + 0.36 × lnHR(PFS) with a statistically non-significant intercept (95% CI: -0.23 - 0.00) and a statistically significant slope (95% CI: 0.17 - 0.57). The predictive accuracy of the WLR was 95.8% in LOOCV. Across sensitivity analyses correlations between HR(PFS) and HR(OS) were ≥0.77 and ≥0.85 based on BRMA and WLR, respectively, and the accuracy of the WLR model in LOOCV was ≥88%. When predicting HR(OS) for newly published trials, the differences between the observed and model-predicted HR(OS)'s were <0.05. CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest a clinically meaningful and moderate trial-level correlation between PFS and OS across all analyses. The analyses and high accuracy of the surrogacy equations shown in internal and external validations can enable earlier prediction of treatment effects on OS from the improvements on PFS for previously untreated unresectable or metastatic melanoma.