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Incorporating historical information to improve dose optimization design with toxicity and efficacy endpoints: iBOIN-ET
Authors:Yunqi Zhao  Rachael Liu  Kentaro Takeda
Affiliation:1. Statistical and Quantitative Sciences, Takeda Pharmaceuticals, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA;2. Data Science, Astellas Pharma Global Development, Inc., Northbrook, Illinois, USA
Abstract:In modern oncology drug development, adaptive designs have been proposed to identify the recommended phase 2 dose. The conventional dose finding designs focus on the identification of maximum tolerated dose (MTD). However, designs ignoring efficacy could put patients under risk by pushing to the MTD. Especially in immuno-oncology and cell therapy, the complex dose-toxicity and dose-efficacy relationships make such MTD driven designs more questionable. Additionally, it is not uncommon to have data available from other studies that target on similar mechanism of action and patient population. Due to the high variability from phase I trial, it is beneficial to borrow historical study information into the design when available. This will help to increase the model efficiency and accuracy and provide dose specific recommendation rules to avoid toxic dose level and increase the chance of patient allocation at potential efficacious dose levels. In this paper, we propose iBOIN-ET design that uses prior distribution extracted from historical studies to minimize the probability of decision error. The proposed design utilizes the concept of skeleton from both toxicity and efficacy data, coupled with prior effective sample size to control the amount of historical information to be incorporated. Extensive simulation studies across a variety of realistic settings are reported including a comparison of iBOIN-ET design to other model based and assisted approaches. The proposed novel design demonstrates the superior performances in percentage of selecting the correct optimal dose (OD), average number of patients allocated to the correct OD, and overdosing control during dose escalation process.
Keywords:adaptive design  Bayesian  dose finding  dose optimization  efficacy-toxicity  informative prior
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