The dilemma that Dr. Ruskin and other physicians who heard the results voiced was how best to interpret the study’s primary results.
“This trial was designed to address whether ablation has an impact [compared with medical management] on hard endpoints, like mortality, and the intention-to-treat analysis showed no difference. I feel bound to adhere to the intention-to-treat analysis, the primary result” the traditional default arbiter of a randomized trial’s outcome, Dr. Ruskin said in an interview, “But intention-to-treat analyses are built on a foundation where most patients are maintained on their assigned treatment.”
“As a practicing physician, I’ll look at the on-treatment analysis because those are the patients who actually got the treatment,” commented Christine M. Albert, MD, professor of medicine at Harvard and director of the Center for Arrhythmia Prevention at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston. She also highlighted a clear message from the trial about ablation.The results “tell us that there wasn’t harm from ablation,” Dr. Albert said during a press conference. “That is really important because, before this, we didn’t know for sure. These data make me a little more confident about offering patients ablation. I now have data to discuss with patients that’s useful for decision making.”