| Literature DB >> 32143729 |
Maxine Bennett1, Adrian P Mander2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For many disease areas, there are often treatments in different stages of the development process. We consider the design of a two-arm parallel group trial where it is planned to add a new experimental treatment arm during the trial. This could potentially save money, patients, time and resources; however, the addition of a treatment arm creates a multiple comparison problem. Current practice in trials when a new treatment arm has been added is to compare the new treatment only to controls randomised concurrently, and this is the setting we consider here. Furthermore, for standard multi-arm trials, optimal allocation randomises a larger number of patients to the control arm than to each experimental treatment arm.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive design; Adding a treatment arm; Family-wise error rate control; Multiple testing; Optimal allocation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32143729 PMCID: PMC7060622 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-020-4073-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Example of adding a single experimental treatment arm to a two-arm trial comparing treatment 1 to control. The first dashed vertical line represents when the new treatment arm (treatment 2) is added to the trial. The second dashed vertical line represents when the original treatment (treatment 1) finishes recruitment and the third dashed vertical line represents when the control and treatment 2 finish recruiting patients. The horizontal dashed lines represent the additional patients required per treatment group above the original sample size estimate to control the FWER whilst maintaining randomisation of 1:1:1 to all treatment arms
FWER, sample size, critical value (CV) and overall power comparisons for 90% marginal power
| Design | FWER | Total sample size | CV | Overall power |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Two separate trials | 0.0494 | 936 | 1.96 | 0.81 |
| Two separate trials: adjustment for multiplicity | 0.0250 | 1104 | 2.24 | 0.81 |
| Single trial: no multiplicity adjustment | 0.0454 | 702 | 1.96 | 0.83 |
| Single trial: Dunnett adjustment for multiplicity | 0.0250 | 816 | 2.21 | 0.83 |
| Adding an arm: no multiplicity adjustment | 0.0477 | 802 | 1.96 | 0.82 |
| Adding an arm: Dunnett adjustment for multiplicity | 0.0250 | 922 | 2.23 | 0.82 |
Fig. 2Comparing a single trial to separate trials when a treatment arm is added at different time points during the trial, for varying power (70%, 80% and 90%) and FWER (2.5%, 5% and 10%). It is assumed here that randomisation is 1:1:1 and the treatment effect to be detected is the same for all treatments.
Fig. 3Example of adding a single experimental treatment arm to a two-arm trial comparing treatment 1 to control. The first dashed vertical line represents when the new treatment arm (treatment 2) is added to the trial. The second dashed vertical line represents when all treatments finish recruiting. The allocation ratio is adapted when treatment 2 is added and all treatments finish recruiting simultaneously. The allocation ratios and sample sizes in each stage for each treatment are displayed
Fig. 4Example of adding a single experimental treatment arm to a two-arm trial comparing treatment 1 to control. The first dashed vertical line represents when the new treatment arm (treatment 2) is added to the trial. The second dashed vertical line represents when treatment 1 finishes recruiting and the third dashed vertical line represents when treatment 2 and control finish recruiting. The allocation ratios are adapted when treatment 2 is added to the trial and again when treatment 1 finishes recruiting. The allocation ratios and sample sizes in each stage for each treatment are displayed
Allocation ratios, overall power and sample size comparisons for the adding a treatment arm design using optimal allocation when treatments finish recruitment at different times
| Stage 3 ratio | Stage 2 ratio | Correlation | Overall power | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1:0.2 | 2.015:1:1 | 100 | 0.170 | 0.852 |
| 1:0.3 | 1.932:1:1 | 93 | 0.176 | 0.850 |
| 1:0.4 | 1.856:1:1 | 85 | 0.181 | 0.848 |
| 1:0.5 | 1.791:1:1 | 78 | 0.186 | 0.847 |
| 1:0.6 | 1.730:1:1 | 71 | 0.191 | 0.845 |
| 1:0.7 | 1.678:1:1 | 64 | 0.197 | 0.844 |
| 1:0.8 | 1.632:1:1 | 58 | 0.202 | 0.843 |
The total sample size of the trial is based on an adding a treatment arm with 1:1:1 allocation design with a marginal power of 90% and an FWER of 2.5%