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Evidence-based personalised medicine in critical...
Journal article

Evidence-based personalised medicine in critical care: a framework for quantifying and applying individualised treatment effects in patients who are critically ill

Abstract

Clinicians aim to provide treatments that will result in the best outcome for each patient. Ideally, treatment decisions are based on evidence from randomised clinical trials. Randomised trials conventionally report an aggregated difference in outcomes between patients in each group, known as an average treatment effect. However, the actual effect of treatment on outcomes (treatment response) can vary considerably between individuals, and can differ substantially from the average treatment effect. This variation in response to treatment between patients-heterogeneity of treatment effect-is particularly important in critical care because common critical care syndromes (eg, sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome) are clinically and biologically heterogeneous. Statistical approaches have been developed to analyse heterogeneity of treatment effect and predict individualised treatment effects for each patient. In this Review, we outline a framework for deriving and validating individualised treatment effects and identify challenges to applying individualised treatment effect estimates to inform treatment decisions in clinical care.

Authors

Munroe ES; Spicer A; Castellvi-Font A; Zalucky A; Dianti J; Linck EG; Talisa V; Urner M; Angus DC; Baedorf-Kassis E

Journal

The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, Vol. 13, No. 6, pp. 556–568

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

June 1, 2025

DOI

10.1016/s2213-2600(25)00054-2

ISSN

2213-2600

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