| Literature DB >> 27730735 |
Abstract
The past 15 years has seen many pharmaceutical sponsors consider and implement adaptive designs (AD) across all phases of drug development. Given their arrival at the turn of the millennium, we might think that they are a recent invention. That is not the case. The earliest idea of an AD predates Bradford Hill's MRC tuberculosis study, appearing in Biometrika in 1933. In this paper, we trace the development of response-ADs, designs in which the allocation to intervention arms depends on the responses of subjects already treated. We describe some statistical details underlying the designs, but our main focus is to describe and comment on ADs from the medical research literature.Entities:
Keywords: 3+3; Bayesian; biased coin; clinical trials; continual reassessment method; drug development; play-the-winner; randomised play-the-winner; response ADs; up-and-down
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27730735 DOI: 10.1002/pst.1778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharm Stat ISSN: 1539-1604 Impact factor: 1.894