| Literature DB >> 32571298 |
Erik van Werkhoven1, Samantha Hinsley2,3, Eleni Frangou4, Jane Holmes5, Rosemarie de Haan1, Maria Hawkins6, Sarah Brown3, Sharon B Love7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Awareness of model-based designs for dose-finding studies such as the Continual Reassessment Method (CRM) is now becoming more commonplace amongst clinicians, statisticians and trial management staff. In some settings toxicities can occur a long time after treatment has finished, resulting in extremely long, interrupted, CRM design trials. The Time-to-Event CRM (TiTE-CRM), a modification to the original CRM, accounts for the timing of late-onset toxicities and results in shorter trial duration. In this article, we discuss how to design and deliver a trial using this method, from the grant application stage through to dissemination, using two radiotherapy trials as examples.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive trial design; Clinical trial design; Dose-finding; Late toxicity; Phase I; TiTE-CRM
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32571298 PMCID: PMC7477911 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-020-01012-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Fig. 1Graphic illustration of the TiTECRM method. The first plot shows the recruited participants over time. We illustrate the observation window for each recruit; has experienced a toxicity hence omitting presenting the full observation window. The dose allocated for participant 5, at the current time point, is decided by accounting for all of the available data, which includes the toxicity status and weights of participants 1–4. These will be accounted for in the calculation of the updated dose-toxicity curve. The table shows the weight that each participant contributes in updating the dose-toxicity curve when participant 5 is recruited onto the trial. Although participant 3 has not completed the observation window, they have experienced a toxicity event, so their contributed weight to the model is 1. The second plot presents the dose allocation for each participant. In this scenario, once a toxicity is observed, the model recommends de-escalating to dose level 2. As participant 4 was not on the trial for long when participant 5 was recruited, the model recommends the same dose for participant 5. This figure reflects the example code and (fictitious) data presented in the Additional file 1
Examples of clinical trials designed using the TiTE-CRM
| Publication | Trial details |
|---|---|
| Ben-Josef et al. [ | Radiation delivered with gemcitabine in participants with unresectable pancreatic cancer |
| Brown et al. [ | Concurrent temozolomide and intensity modulated radiation therapy in glioblastoma multiforme |
| Chugh et al. [ | Doxorubicin plus cixutumumab in soft tissue sarcoma |
| Frangou et al. [ | Radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and M6620 in participants with oesophageal cancer (CHARIOT) |
| Kim et al. [ | Whole brain radiotherapy and RRx-001 in radioresistant melanoma brain metastases |
| Kyriakopoulos et al. [ | APC-100 in male participants with castrate-resistant prostate cancer |
| Haan et al. [ | Three trials of radical radiotherapy and Olaparib in non-small cell lung cancer, breast cancer, and head and neck squamous cell carcinoma |
| Lao et al. [ | Bortezomib administered in combination with whole brain radiotherapy in participants with brain metastasis |
| Lepeak et al. [ | Continuous MKC-1 in participants with advanced or metastatic solid malignancies |
| Muler et al. [ | Cisplatin combined with gemcitabine and radiation therapy in pancreatic cancer |
| Schneider et al. [ | Vorinostat in combination with docetaxel in participants with advanced and relapsed solid malignancies |
| Tevaarwerk et al. [ | Continuous MKC-1 in participants with advanced or metastatic solid malignancies |
| Zhen et al. [ | Cabozantinib and gemcitabine in participants with advanced pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma |
Minimum recommended detail to be included in grant applications. X shows the application stage where the information is required
| Information to be included | Outline (for two-stage applications) or full (where the grant application requests funding and time to design and set-up the model) | Full (where the grant application does not include time to design and set-up the model) |
|---|---|---|
| Reference to key TiTE-CRM literature and a brief explanation of why this design is being used, as reviewers may not have encountered it before. | X | X |
| Sample size. If this is not fixed, provide an upper and lower bound. | X | X |
| If not confirmed, add a note to say it will be confirmed after further simulations have been undertaken. | ||
| Dose-limiting toxicities | X | X |
| Target toxicity level | X | X |
| Include justification and how this was determined. | ||
| Dose-toxicity curve | X | |
| Number of dose levels | X | X |
| Include an estimate if this is not yet known. | ||
| Starting dose level | X | |
| Stopping rules | X | |
| Any restrictions on recruitment or dose escalation | X | |
| Software or packages used to set up the model and perform simulations | X | |
| Information on simulations to be performed | X | |
| Include details of toxicity timing and recruitment rates | ||
| Simulation results | X | |
| Include details of toxicity timing and recruitment rates | ||
| How the data will be used throughout the trial to determine dose decisions | X | |
| Discuss the role of the safety review committee and how late toxicities will be incorporated in the trial. Explain that dose decisions are not made solely by the TiTE-CRM model. |