| Literature DB >> 22999017 |
Abstract
Clinical development of novel therapeutics begins with a coordinated sequence of early phase clinical trials. Such early human studies confront a series of methodological and ethical challenges. In what follows, I propose a theoretical framework for early human studies aimed at informing the negotiation of these challenges. At the outset of clinical development, researchers confront a virtually undifferentiated landscape of uncertainty with respect to three variables: outcomes, their probability of occurrence, and operation dimensions needed to effectuate favorable outcomes. Early human trials transform this uncertain landscape into one where there are grounds for belief about risk and benefit for various combined operation dimensions. To accomplish this, studies set out with two aims. First, they identify a set of operation dimensions that, when combined as a package (intervention ensemble), elicits a reasonable probability of a target outcome. Second, they define the boundaries of dimension values within an intervention ensemble. This latter aim entails exposing at least some volunteers in early studies to treatments that are inactive or excessive. I provide examples that illustrate the way early human studies discover and delimit intervention ensembles, and close by offering some implications of this framework for ethics, methodology, and efficiency in clinical development of new interventions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22999017 PMCID: PMC3551836 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-13-173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1How early trials proceed with respect to a single dimension. Investigtors do not yet know the value for a given dimension, such as dose. (A) The investigators begin the study at a value that exceeds an ethical threshold (that is, value for which there is warranted belief that knowledge gain will redeem burdens and risks of drug administration). (B) Investigators escalate dimension values and cross a target effect threshold (which could be a pharmacokinetic variable, or a biological response of some sort). They have now defined the lower edges of dimension values. (C) They continue escalating and eventually re-cross a target effect threshold (D). When there are solid grounds for knowing they have crossed this target effect threshold, but well before re-crossing the ethical threshold, they discontinue escalation. The burdens or risks in (D) are considerably higher than elsewhere in the study, but enable warranted belief about the upper boundaries of therapeutic dimension values.
Common dimensions in intervention ensembles
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| Dose | mg/kg; cells; vector particles… | 250 mg/m2 | 10 mg/kg | ≥8 × 10^6 cells |
| Schedule | Daily; 4× weekly w/2 wk holidays… | Weekly until disease progression | 3× @ 2-wk intervals; 4-wk intervals after | |
| Administration/target | Infusion; oral; intratumoral… | Intravenous infusion | Intravenous infusion | Intravenous infusion |
| Co-intervention | Radiotherapy; immunosuppresion… | | Standard of care | Non-myeloablative conditioning |
| Risk mitigation | Cardiac monitoring; liver enzymes… | Serum electrolytes monitoring | Monitor patients for hypersensitivity | |
| Timing delivery | Symptom onset; 12 h after event… | After irinotecan or oxaliplatin failure | | 3 weeks after stopping PEG-ADA |
| Diagnostic criteria | Marker positivity; diagnostic score… | KRAS mutation in codon 12 or 13 | α-nuclear Ab titer ≥ 1:80 and/or α-dsDNA | |
| Contraindications | Concurrent infection; clothing disorder… | | Prior anaphylaxis to belimumab | Neutralizing Abs to vector (AAV8) |
| Indications | Disease; injury; at-risk population… | Metastatic colorectal cancer | Active systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) | ADA-SCID |
| Age | | Adults | Non-geriatric adults | Children |
| Endpoint | Change on scale; time to event… | Survival | SLE responder index | Immune system reconstitution |
| Duration | Short term; ‘long term’ remission… | 1 year | Permanent | |