Investigating started sample size, completed sample size and drop‐out rate in 10 252 phase III clinical trials: Insights from ClinicalTrials.gov
Henian Chen, Jinyong Pang, Yayi Zhao, Biwei Cao, Matthew J. Valente, Weiliang Cen, Elena ValkanovaAims
This study investigated the started sample size, completed sample size and drop‐out rate of 10 252 published and unpublished phase III clinical trials registered on
Methods
We conducted a comprehensive search on
Results
Out of the 10 252 trials analysed, 889 (8.7%) were sponsored by the US National Institutes of Health/US Federal agencies (NIH/US Fed), 8429 (82.2%) were sponsored by industry. The overall median started sample size was 302. The overall median completed sample size was 228. The median completed sample sizes were 258 for industry‐sponsored trials, and 194 for NIH/US Fed‐sponsored trials. The median completed sample sizes were 321 for biological interventions and 223 for drug interventions. The overall median drop‐out rate was 11%. Statistically significant differences were observed in sample sizes between industry‐sponsored trials and NIH/US Fed‐sponsored trials (P < 0.0001). Neither the started sample sizes nor the completed sample sizes have shown any change over the course of the past 20 years.
Conclusions
Our findings indicate that a majority of the analysed trials lack sufficient statistical power (80%) to detect small effect sizes, and approximately half of the trials did not have 80% power to detect medium effect sizes. Notably, trials funded by NIH/US Fed exhibit significantly smaller sample sizes compared to trials sponsored by industry. When conducting sample size calculations for clinical trials, it is crucial to consider the anticipated effect size, variability and drop‐out rate.