| Literature DB >> 26390951 |
Jiacheng Yuan1, Herbert Pang2,3, Tiejun Tong4, Dong Xi5, Wenzhao Guo5, Peter Mesenbrink5.
Abstract
In drug development, when the drug class has a relatively well-defined path to regulatory approval and the enrollment is slow with certain patient populations, one may want to consider combining studies of different phases. This article considers combining a proof of concept (POC) study and a dose-finding (DF) study with a control treatment. Conventional DF study designs sometimes are not efficient, or do not have a high probability to find the optimal dose(s) for Phase III trials. This article seeks more efficient DF strategies that allow the economical testing of more doses. Hypothetical examples are simulated to compare the proposed adaptive design vs. the conventional design based on different models of the overall quantitative representation of efficacy, safety, and tolerability. The results show that the proposed adaptive design tests more active doses with higher power and comparable or smaller sample size in a shorter overall study duration for POC and DF, compared with a conventional design.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive design; dose finding; proof of concept; seamless design; utility
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26390951 PMCID: PMC5025390 DOI: 10.1080/10543406.2015.1094807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biopharm Stat ISSN: 1054-3406 Impact factor: 1.051