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Optimal design of multi-arm multi-stage trials.


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Authors

Wason, James MS 

Abstract

In drug development, there is often uncertainty about the most promising among a set of different treatments. Multi-arm multi-stage (MAMS) trials provide large gains in efficiency over separate randomised trials of each treatment. They allow a shared control group, dropping of ineffective treatments before the end of the trial and stopping the trial early if sufficient evidence of a treatment being superior to control is found. In this paper, we discuss optimal design of MAMS trials. An optimal design has the required type I error rate and power but minimises the expected sample size at some set of treatment effects. Finding an optimal design requires searching over stopping boundaries and sample size, potentially a large number of parameters. We propose a method that combines quick evaluation of specific designs and an efficient stochastic search to find the optimal design parameters. We compare various potential designs motivated by the design of a phase II MAMS trial. We also consider allocating more patients to the control group, as has been carried out in real MAMS studies. We show that the optimal allocation to the control group, although greater than a 1:1 ratio, is smaller than previously advocated and that the gain in efficiency is generally small.

Description

Keywords

Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors, Anti-Retroviral Agents, Benzimidazoles, Benzoates, Bias, Clinical Trials as Topic, Computer Simulation, Drug Therapy, Combination, Endpoint Determination, HIV Infections, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Research Design, Sample Size, Telmisartan

Journal Title

Stat Med

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0277-6715
1097-0258

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MR/J004979/1)
NIHR Academy (CDF-2010-03-16)