4.10.17final Clinical Trials Talk.4.10.2017 - 300526 - 284 - 30426 - v1
4.10.17final Clinical Trials Talk.4.10.2017 - 300526 - 284 - 30426 - v1
4.10.17final Clinical Trials Talk.4.10.2017 - 300526 - 284 - 30426 - v1
• Challenges
– Long term follow-up versus early benefit
– Rare AEs may be seen only with very large numbers
of exposed patients and/or long term follow-up
• Example – COX II inhibitors
– Vioxx & Celebrex
– Immediate pain reduction versus longer term
increase in cardiovascular risk
Characterization of Trials
Phase Single Center Multi Center
Randomized Non-Rand. Randomized Non-Rand.
• Pharmacokinetics (PK):
– “what the body does to the drug”
– ADME: absorption, distribution, metabolism and
excretion
– PK parameters: Cmax, AUC (drug exposure), t1/2,
Clearance, etc.
• Pharmacodynamics (PD):
– “what the drug does to the body”
– e.g. nadir counts, non-hematologic toxicity, molecular
correlates, imaging endpoints
Phase I Design Strategy
A. Fibonacci
B. “Standard”
C. “1 Up, 1 Down”
D. “2 Up, 1 Down”
E. “Extended Standard”
F. Baysian
G. Continuous Reassessment Method
H. Currently, significant alteration of previous trial
designs – Fit for Purpose
Typical Scheme
1. Enter 3 patients at a given dose
2. If no toxicity, go to next dosage and repeat
Step 1
3. a. If 1 patient has serious toxicity, add 3 more
patients at that does (go to Step 4)
b. If 1/6 have serious toxicity, consider MTD
4. a. If 2 or more of 6 patients have toxicity,
drop down 1 dose to confirm safety
b. If 1 of 6 has toxicity, increase dose and go
back to step 1
Types of Phase 1 Trials
• Multiple types of Phase 1 Trials
– Dose finding
– Food effect study
– QTc prolongation study
– Bioequivalence study
– Approved or investigational agent with pharmacokinetic
focus (adding of CYP inhibitor)
• Typically considered drug-drug interaction study
– Investigational agent + investigational agent
– Investigational agent + approved agent(s)
– Approved agent + approved agent(s)
– Approved or investigational agent with
pharmacodynamic focus (e.g. evaluation using
functional imaging)
– Approved or investigational agent with radiotherapy
Phase II Trials
• Design(s)
– No control (is this wise?)
– Two-stage (double sampling)
– Goal is to reject ineffective drugs ASAP
• Non-randomized
• Vulnerable to biases
Different underlying populations
Criteria for selecting patients
Patient care
Diagnostic or evaluating criteria
Randomized Control
Clinical Trial
2. Recruitment
– Twice as many new patients
4. Administrative Complexity
Comparing Treatments
• Fundamental principle
• Groups must be alike in all important aspects and only differ in the
treatment each group receives
• In practical terms, “comparable treatment groups” means
“alike on the average”
• Randomization
• Each patient has the same chance of receiving any of the
treatments under study
• Allocation of treatments to participants is carried out using a
chance mechanism so that neither the patient nor the physician
know in advance which therapy will be assigned
• Blinding
• Avoidance of psychological influence
• Fair evaluation of outcomes
Randomized Phase III Experimental Designs
Assume:
• Patients enrolled in trial have satisfied eligibility
criteria and have given consent
• Balanced randomization: each treatment group will
be assigned an equal number of patients
Issue
• Different experimental designs can be used to
answer different therapeutic questions
Commonly Used Phase III Designs
• Parallel
• Withdrawal
• Group/Cluster
• Randomized Consent
• Cross Over
• Factorial
• Large Simple
• Equivalence/Non-inferiority
• Sequential
Conclusions
1) Clinical Trials are a necessary
component of cancer drug development
2) There are discrete developmental phases
of clinical drug development, often with
some endpoint overlap (1o or 2o):
1) Phase I Trials, although many different
types, are typically answering questions for
one of the first times in man
2) Phase II Trials are focused on efficacy
3) Phase III Trials help determine benefit over
Stand of Care treatment
We must work together in the fight
against Cancer – please encourage
patients and caregivers to consider
treatment on a clinical trial