AI Article Synopsis

  • Phase II dose-response studies aim to demonstrate treatment effectiveness and determine the appropriate dose for further trials.
  • Randomized designs typically involve equal allocation to high doses or several doses and placebo, but adaptive designs may offer benefits in quickly responding trials.
  • The proposed adaptive design allows for focused subject allocation in areas of interest, permits early trial termination if necessary, and shows improved power in detecting dose-response relationships and selecting the correct dose compared to traditional randomized designs.

Article Abstract

The goals of phase II dose-response studies are to prove that the treatment is effective and to choose the dose for further development. Randomized designs with equal allocation to either a high dose and placebo or to each of several doses and placebo are typically used. However, in trials where response is observed relatively quickly, adaptive designs might offer an advantage over equal allocation. We propose an adaptive design for dose-response trials that concentrates the allocation of subjects in one or more areas of interest, for example, near a minimum clinically important effect level, or near some maximal effect level, and also allows for the possibility to stop the trial early if needed. The proposed adaptive design yields higher power to detect a dose-response relationship, higher power in comparison with placebo, and selects the correct dose more frequently compared with a corresponding randomized design with equal allocation to doses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2825484PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sim.3209DOI Listing

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