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Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit

BACKGROUND: The pace of novel medical treatments and approaches to therapy has accelerated in recent years. Unfortunately, many potential therapeutic advances do not fulfil their promise when subjected to randomized controlled trials. It is therefore highly desirable to speed up the process of evalu...

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Autores principales: Royston, Patrick, Barthel, Friederike M-S, Parmar, Mahesh KB, Choodari-Oskooei, Babak, Isham, Valerie
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3078872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21418571
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-12-81
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author Royston, Patrick
Barthel, Friederike M-S
Parmar, Mahesh KB
Choodari-Oskooei, Babak
Isham, Valerie
author_facet Royston, Patrick
Barthel, Friederike M-S
Parmar, Mahesh KB
Choodari-Oskooei, Babak
Isham, Valerie
author_sort Royston, Patrick
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The pace of novel medical treatments and approaches to therapy has accelerated in recent years. Unfortunately, many potential therapeutic advances do not fulfil their promise when subjected to randomized controlled trials. It is therefore highly desirable to speed up the process of evaluating new treatment options, particularly in phase II and phase III trials. To help realize such an aim, in 2003, Royston and colleagues proposed a class of multi-arm, two-stage trial designs intended to eliminate poorly performing contenders at a first stage (point in time). Only treatments showing a predefined degree of advantage against a control treatment were allowed through to a second stage. Arms that survived the first-stage comparison on an intermediate outcome measure entered a second stage of patient accrual, culminating in comparisons against control on the definitive outcome measure. The intermediate outcome is typically on the causal pathway to the definitive outcome (i.e. the features that cause an intermediate event also tend to cause a definitive event), an example in cancer being progression-free and overall survival. Although the 2003 paper alluded to multi-arm trials, most of the essential design features concerned only two-arm trials. Here, we extend the two-arm designs to allow an arbitrary number of stages, thereby increasing flexibility by building in several 'looks' at the accumulating data. Such trials can terminate at any of the intermediate stages or the final stage. METHODS: We describe the trial design and the mathematics required to obtain the timing of the 'looks' and the overall significance level and power of the design. We support our results by extensive simulation studies. As an example, we discuss the design of the STAMPEDE trial in prostate cancer. RESULTS: The mathematical results on significance level and power are confirmed by the computer simulations. Our approach compares favourably with methodology based on beta spending functions and on monitoring only a primary outcome measure for lack of benefit of the new treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The new designs are practical and are supported by theory. They hold considerable promise for speeding up the evaluation of new treatments in phase II and III trials.
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spelling pubmed-30788722011-04-19 Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit Royston, Patrick Barthel, Friederike M-S Parmar, Mahesh KB Choodari-Oskooei, Babak Isham, Valerie Trials Research BACKGROUND: The pace of novel medical treatments and approaches to therapy has accelerated in recent years. Unfortunately, many potential therapeutic advances do not fulfil their promise when subjected to randomized controlled trials. It is therefore highly desirable to speed up the process of evaluating new treatment options, particularly in phase II and phase III trials. To help realize such an aim, in 2003, Royston and colleagues proposed a class of multi-arm, two-stage trial designs intended to eliminate poorly performing contenders at a first stage (point in time). Only treatments showing a predefined degree of advantage against a control treatment were allowed through to a second stage. Arms that survived the first-stage comparison on an intermediate outcome measure entered a second stage of patient accrual, culminating in comparisons against control on the definitive outcome measure. The intermediate outcome is typically on the causal pathway to the definitive outcome (i.e. the features that cause an intermediate event also tend to cause a definitive event), an example in cancer being progression-free and overall survival. Although the 2003 paper alluded to multi-arm trials, most of the essential design features concerned only two-arm trials. Here, we extend the two-arm designs to allow an arbitrary number of stages, thereby increasing flexibility by building in several 'looks' at the accumulating data. Such trials can terminate at any of the intermediate stages or the final stage. METHODS: We describe the trial design and the mathematics required to obtain the timing of the 'looks' and the overall significance level and power of the design. We support our results by extensive simulation studies. As an example, we discuss the design of the STAMPEDE trial in prostate cancer. RESULTS: The mathematical results on significance level and power are confirmed by the computer simulations. Our approach compares favourably with methodology based on beta spending functions and on monitoring only a primary outcome measure for lack of benefit of the new treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The new designs are practical and are supported by theory. They hold considerable promise for speeding up the evaluation of new treatments in phase II and III trials. BioMed Central 2011-03-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3078872/ /pubmed/21418571 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-12-81 Text en Copyright ©2011 Royston et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Royston, Patrick
Barthel, Friederike M-S
Parmar, Mahesh KB
Choodari-Oskooei, Babak
Isham, Valerie
Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit
title Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit
title_full Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit
title_fullStr Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit
title_full_unstemmed Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit
title_short Designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit
title_sort designs for clinical trials with time-to-event outcomes based on stopping guidelines for lack of benefit
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3078872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21418571
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-12-81
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