Phase I dose-escalation oncology trials with sequential multiple schedules

2021-04-14 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Phase I dose-escalation oncology trials with sequential multiple schedules​
Günhan, B. K.; Weber, S.; Seroutou, A. & Friede, T.​ (2021) 
BMC Medical Research Methodology21(1) art. 69​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-021-01218-9 

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Authors
Günhan, Burak Kürsad; Weber, Sebastian; Seroutou, Abdelkader; Friede, Tim
Abstract
Abstract Background Conventional methods for phase I dose-escalation trials in oncology are based on a single treatment schedule only. More recently, however, multiple schedules are more frequently investigated in the same trial. Methods Here, we consider sequential phase I trials, where the trial proceeds with a new schedule (e.g. daily or weekly dosing) once the dose escalation with another schedule has been completed. The aim is to utilize the information from both the completed and the ongoing schedules to inform decisions on the dose level for the next dose cohort. For this purpose, we adapted the time-to-event pharmacokinetics (TITE-PK) model, which were originally developed for simultaneous investigation of multiple schedules. TITE-PK integrates information from multiple schedules using a pharmacokinetics (PK) model. Results In a simulation study, the developed approach is compared to the bridging continual reassessment method and the Bayesian logistic regression model using a meta-analytic-predictive prior. TITE-PK results in better performance than comparators in terms of recommending acceptable dose and avoiding overly toxic doses for sequential phase I trials in most of the scenarios considered. Furthermore, better performance of TITE-PK is achieved while requiring similar number of patients in the simulated trials. For the scenarios involving one schedule, TITE-PK displays similar performance with alternatives in terms of acceptable dose recommendations. The R and Stan code for the implementation of an illustrative sequential phase I trial example in oncology is publicly available (https://github.com/gunhanb/TITEPK_sequential). Conclusion In phase I oncology trials with sequential multiple schedules, the use of all relevant information is of great importance. For these trials, the adapted TITE-PK which combines information using PK principles is recommended.
Issue Date
14-April-2021
Publisher
BioMed Central
Journal
BMC Medical Research Methodology 
eISSN
1471-2288
Language
English
Sponsor
Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2021

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