Designing a seamless phase II/III clinical trial using early outcomes for treatment selection: An application in multiple sclerosis

2011 | conference paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Designing a seamless phase II/III clinical trial using early outcomes for treatment selection: An application in multiple sclerosis​
Friede, T.; Parsons, N.; Stallard, N.; Todd, S.; Marquez, E. V.; Chataway, J. & Nicholas, R.​ (2011)
Statistics in Medicine30(13) pp. 1528​-1540. , Biopharm & Hlth Grp French Soc Stat, Paris, FRANCE.
Hoboken​: Wiley-blackwell. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.4202 

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Authors
Friede, Tim; Parsons, N.; Stallard, Nigel; Todd, Susan; Marquez, Elsa Valdes; Chataway, J.; Nicholas, R.
Abstract
In recent years adaptive seamless phase II/III designs (ASDs) allowing treatment or dose selection at an interim analysis have gained much attention because of their potential to save development costs and to shorten time-to-market of a new compound compared to conventional drug development programmes with separate trials for individual phases. In this paper, we describe an ASD with treatment selection based on early outcome data, specifically considering the situation where no final outcomes are observed at the time of the interim analysis. Bringing together combination tests for adaptive designs and the closure principle for multiple testing, control of the familywise type I error rate in the strong sense is achieved. Furthermore, a simulation model is proposed based on standardized test statistics that allows the generation of virtual trials for a variety of outcomes. We use this simulation model to investigate the actual type I error rate of the proposed testing procedure and find that the familywise type I error rate is controlled as expected. The method is often conservative, with the degree of conservatism depending on the correlation between early and late outcome, the true mean values of the early outcome in the different treatment groups and the selection rule. The investigations are motivated and illustrated by an application of the proposed design and simulation model to progressive multiple sclerosis. Copyright (C) 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Issue Date
2011
Status
published
Publisher
Wiley-blackwell
Journal
Statistics in Medicine 
Conference Place
Biopharm & Hlth Grp French Soc Stat, Paris, FRANCE
ISSN
1097-0258; 0277-6715
Sponsor
Department of Health; Multiple Sclerosis Society [913]

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