The Tendril Plot-a novel visual summary of the incidence, significance and temporal aspects of adverse events in clinical trials
Martin Karpefors, James Weatherall, Martin Karpefors, James Weatherall
Abstract
Background: In contrast to efficacy, safety hypotheses of clinical trials are not always pre-specified, and therefore, the safety interpretation work of a trial tends to be more exploratory, often reactive, and the analysis more statistically and graphically challenging.
Methods: We introduce a new means of visualizing the adverse event data across an entire clinical trial.
Results: The approach overcomes some of the current limitations of adverse event analysis and streamlines the way safety data can be explored, interpreted and analyzed. Using a phase II study, we describe and exemplify how the tendril plot effectively summarizes the time-resolved safety profile of two treatment arms in a single plot and how that can provide scientists with a trial safety overview that can support medical decision making.
Conclusion: To our knowledge, the tendril plot is the only way to graphically show important treatment differences with preserved temporal information, across an entire clinical trial, in a single view.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01443845.
Figures
![Figure 1.](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/7646859/bin/ocy016f1.jpg)
![Figure 2.](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/7646859/bin/ocy016f2.jpg)
![Figure 3.](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/7646859/bin/ocy016f3.jpg)
Source: PubMed