Literature DB >> 23851207

Spinal cord injury neuroprotection and the promise of flexible adaptive clinical trials.

William J Meurer1, William G Barsan2.   

Abstract

Effective treatments for acute neurologic illness and injury are lacking, particularly for spinal cord injury (SCI). The very structure of clinical trials may be contributing to this because assumptions made during trial planning preclude additional learning within residual important areas of uncertainty, such as dose, timing, and duration of treatment. Adaptive clinical trials offer potential solutions to some of the factors that may be slowing the pace of discovery. Broadly defined, one can consider an adaptive clinical trial as any sort of clinical trial that makes use of information from within the trial to make decisions about how the trial is conducted going forward; however, it is important to emphasize that regardless of the degree of flexibility or complexity of an adaptive clinical trial design, the types of designs being described are only those in which all potential changes to the conduct of the trial are prospectively defined before the first patient is enrolled. Within this review, we describe the structure of flexible adaptive clinical trial designs, the process by which they are developed and conducted, and potential opportunities and drawbacks of these approaches. We must accept that there are some uncertainties that remain when both exploratory and confirmatory trials are designed. The process by which teams carefully consider which uncertainties are most important and most likely to potentially compromise the ability to detect an effective treatment can lead to trial designs that are more likely to find the right treatment for the right population of patients.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adaptive clinical trials; Clinical trial design; Phase 2 clinical trials; Phase 3 clinical trials; Spinal cord trauma

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23851207      PMCID: PMC4050030          DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2013.06.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World Neurosurg        ISSN: 1878-8750            Impact factor:   2.104


  15 in total

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3.  Adaptive clinical trials: a partial remedy for the therapeutic misconception?

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5.  An overview of the adaptive designs accelerating promising trials into treatments (ADAPT-IT) project.

Authors:  William J Meurer; Roger J Lewis; Danilo Tagle; Michael D Fetters; Laurie Legocki; Scott Berry; Jason Connor; Valerie Durkalski; Jordan Elm; Wenle Zhao; Shirley Frederiksen; Robert Silbergleit; Yuko Palesch; Donald A Berry; William G Barsan
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6.  Designs for group sequential tests.

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8.  Treatment of comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with induced hypothermia.

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Review 9.  Protection and repair of the injured spinal cord: a review of completed, ongoing, and planned clinical trials for acute spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Gregory W J Hawryluk; James Rowland; Brian K Kwon; Michael G Fehlings
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Authors:  David J Gladstone; Sandra E Black; Antoine M Hakim
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  6 in total

Review 1.  The challenge of recruitment for neurotherapeutic clinical trials in spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Andrew R Blight; Jane Hsieh; Armin Curt; James W Fawcett; James D Guest; Naomi Kleitman; Shekar N Kurpad; Brian K Kwon; Daniel P Lammertse; Norbert Weidner; John D Steeves
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2019-04-08       Impact factor: 2.772

Review 2.  Adaptive trial designs for spinal cord injury clinical trials directed to the central nervous system.

Authors:  James D Guest; John D Steeves; M J Mulcahey; Linda A T Jones; Frank Rockhold; Rϋediger Rupp; John L K Kramer; Steven Kirshblum; Andrew Blight; Daniel Lammertse
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 2.772

3.  A conceptual model for the development process of confirmatory adaptive clinical trials within an emergency research network.

Authors:  Samkeliso C Mawocha; Michael D Fetters; Laurie J Legocki; Timothy C Guetterman; Shirley Frederiksen; William G Barsan; Roger J Lewis; Donald A Berry; William J Meurer
Journal:  Clin Trials       Date:  2017-01-31       Impact factor: 2.486

Review 4.  Spinal cord injury - there is not just one way of treating it.

Authors:  Veronica Estrada; Hans Werner Müller
Journal:  F1000Prime Rep       Date:  2014-09-04

5.  The life cycles of six multi-center adaptive clinical trials focused on neurological emergencies developed for the Advancing Regulatory Science initiative of the National Institutes of Health and US Food and Drug Administration: Case studies from the Adaptive Designs Accelerating Promising Treatments Into Trials Project.

Authors:  Timothy C Guetterman; Michael D Fetters; Samkeliso Mawocha; Laurie J Legocki; William G Barsan; Roger J Lewis; Donald A Berry; William J Meurer
Journal:  SAGE Open Med       Date:  2017-10-16

6.  Fighting for recovery on multiple fronts: The past, present, and future of clinical trials for spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Valerie A Dietz; Nolan Roberts; Katelyn Knox; Sherilynne Moore; Michael Pitonak; Chris Barr; Jesus Centeno; Scott Leininger; Kent C New; Peter Nowell; Matthew Rodreick; Cedric G Geoffroy; Argyrios Stampas; Jennifer N Dulin
Journal:  Front Cell Neurosci       Date:  2022-09-07       Impact factor: 6.147

  6 in total

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