AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper introduces a Bayesian design framework for conducting concurrent clinical trials to establish the efficacy of a proposed biologic as a biosimilar against a reference biologic across multiple therapeutic indications.
  • The framework uses a multivariate normal correlated parameter prior (CPP) that allows for information sharing between different indications while accommodating various data types and endpoints without requiring data modification.
  • The authors demonstrate the applicability of their method by evaluating sample sizes and the design's efficacy using Bayesian approaches, with examples involving trials for follicular lymphoma and rheumatoid arthritis.

Article Abstract

In this paper, we propose a Bayesian design framework for a biosimilars clinical program that entails conducting concurrent trials in multiple therapeutic indications to establish equivalent efficacy for a proposed biologic compared to a reference biologic in each indication to support approval of the proposed biologic as a biosimilar. Our method facilitates information borrowing across indications through the use of a multivariate normal correlated parameter prior (CPP), which is constructed from easily interpretable hyperparameters that represent direct statements about the equivalence hypotheses to be tested. The CPP accommodates different endpoints and data types across indications (eg, binary and continuous) and can, therefore, be used in a wide context of models without having to modify the data (eg, rescaling) to provide reasonable information-borrowing properties. We illustrate how one can evaluate the design using Bayesian versions of the type I error rate and power with the objective of determining the sample size required for each indication such that the design has high power to demonstrate equivalent efficacy in each indication, reasonably high power to demonstrate equivalent efficacy simultaneously in all indications (ie, globally), and reasonable type I error control from a Bayesian perspective. We illustrate the method with several examples, including designing biosimilars trials for follicular lymphoma and rheumatoid arthritis using binary and continuous endpoints, respectively.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7170751PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/biom.13163DOI Listing

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