The success rate of drug development has been declined dramatically in recent years and the current paradigm of drug development is no longer functioning. It requires a major undertaking on breakthrough strategies and methodology for designs to minimize sample sizes and to shorten duration of the development. We propose an alternative phase II/III design based on continuous efficacy endpoints, which consists of two stages: a selection stage and a confirmation stage. For the selection stage, a randomized parallel design with several doses with a placebo group is employed for selection of doses. After the best dose is chosen, the patients of the selected dose group and placebo group continue to enter the confirmation stage. New patients will also be recruited and randomized to receive the selected dose or placebo group. The final analysis is performed with the cumulative data of patients from both stages. With the pre-specified probabilities of rejecting the drug at each stage, sample sizes and critical values for both stages can be determined. As it is a single trial with controlling overall type I and II error rates, the proposed phase II/III adaptive design may not only reduce the sample size but also improve the success rate. An example illustrates the applications of the proposed phase II/III adaptive design.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pst.418 | DOI Listing |
BMJ Open
December 2024
Institute for Cardio-Metabolic Medicine, University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire NHS Trust, University of Warwick Medical School and Coventry University, Coventry, UK
Objective: To estimate the resource use of patients with obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), stratified by New York Heart Association (NYHA) class, in the English and Northern Irish healthcare systems via expert elicitation.
Design: Modified Delphi framework methodology.
Setting: UK HCM secondary care centres (n=24).
Toxics
November 2024
Key Laboratory of Chinese Internal Medicine of Ministry of Education and Beijing, Renal Research Institution of Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, Dongzhimen Hospital Affiliated to Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing 100700, China.
Background: Patients undergoing hemodialysis (HD) for chronic kidney disease (CKD) often encounter anemia. Roxadustat has not only undergone phase II-III clinical trials in patients suffering from CKD and undergoing HD; a number of post-marketing clinical studies have been conducted using the drug. This article was to assess the effectiveness and safety of roxadustat in managing anemia among patients with CKD undergoing HD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJCO Oncol Adv
December 2024
Biometric Research Program, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD.
Purpose: A phase II/III trial is a type of phase III trial that has embedded in it an intermediate phase II go/no-go decision as to whether to continue the accrual to the phase III sample size. We examine the design characteristics and experience of a well-defined set of National Cancer Institute phase II/III trials, with special emphasis on designed accrual suspensions while awaiting the data to become mature enough for the phase II analysis. This experience is used to highlight the potential of using a calendar backstop to avoid an inordinately long accrual suspension.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStroke
January 2025
Experimental Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Bristol, United Kingdom (P.R.M.).
Novel strategies are needed for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke when revascularization therapies are not clinically appropriate or are unsuccessful. rKLK1 (recombinant human tissue kallikrein-1), a bradykinin-producing enzyme, offers a promising potential solution. In animal studies of acute stroke, there is a marked 36-fold increase in bradykinin B2 receptor on brain endothelial cells of the ischemic region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Surg Oncol
January 2025
Department of Human Oncology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Background And Objectives: Standard treatment of patients with stage II/III esophageal or gastroesophageal junction (E/GEJ) cancer involves neoadjuvant chemoradiation (nCRT), resection, and immunotherapy. Our trial evaluated the addition of perioperative avelumab to standard treatments.
Methods: Patients with resectable E/GEJ cancers received avelumab with nCRT and adjuvant avelumab after resection.
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