AI Article Synopsis

  • Advances in targeted agents and immunotherapies have revealed that traditional methods for determining drug doses are often ineffective, especially in clinical research.
  • The FDA's Oncology Center of Excellence launched Project Optimus to improve the way doses are optimized and selected in cancer drug development.
  • The articles in this special issue discuss innovative designs for dose selection and highlight regulatory changes aimed at enhancing clinical trial strategies.

Article Abstract

With the advent of targeted agents and immunological therapies, the medical research community has become increasingly aware that conventional methods for determining the best dose or schedule of a new agent are inadequate. It has been well established that conventional phase I designs cannot reliably identify safe and effective doses. This problem applies, generally, for cytotoxic agents, radiation therapy, targeted agents, and immunotherapies. To address this, the US Food and Drug Administration's Oncology Center of Excellence initiated Project Optimus, with the goal "to reform the dose optimization and dose selection paradigm in oncology drug development." As a response to Project Optimus, the articles in this special issue of review recent advances in methods for choosing the dose or schedule of a new agent with an overall objective of informing clinical trialists of these innovative designs. This introductory article briefly reviews problems with conventional methods, the regulatory changes that encourage better dose optimization designs, and provides brief summaries of the articles that follow in this special issue.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11132935PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17407745241234652DOI Listing

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