Using artificial intelligence tools in answering important clinical questions: The KEYNOTE-183 multiple myeloma experience.

2020 
The phase III, randomized, active-controlled, multicenter, open-label KEYNOTE-183 study (NCT02576977) evaluating pomalidomide and low dose dexamethasone (standard-of-care [SOC]) with or without pembrolizumab in patients with refractory or relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma (rrMM) was placed on full clinical hold by the US FDA on July 03, 2017 due to an imbalance in the number of deaths between arms. Clinically-led subgroup analyses are typically used to shed light on clinical findings. However, this approach is not always successful. We propose a systematic approach using the artificial intelligence tools to identifying risk factors and subgroups contributing to the overall death (prognostic) or to the excess death observed in the pembrolizumab plus SOC arm (predictive) of the KEYNOTE-183 study. In KEYNOTE-183, with a data cutoff date of June 02, 2017, we identified plasmacytoma as a prognostic factor, and ECOG performance status as a predictive factor of death. In addition, a qualitative interaction was observed between ECOG performance status and the treatment arm. The subsequent subgroup analysis based on ECOG performance status confirmed that more deaths were associated with pembrolizumab plus SOC versus SOC alone in patients with ECOG performance status 1.
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