Dose-finding design and benchmark for a right censored endpoint.
Dose-finding
benchmark
competing risks
late-onset toxicity
survival data
treatment discontinuation
Journal
Journal of biopharmaceutical statistics
ISSN: 1520-5711
Titre abrégé: J Biopharm Stat
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9200436
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
01 11 2020
01 11 2020
Historique:
pubmed:
24
11
2020
medline:
26
11
2021
entrez:
23
11
2020
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Dose-finding trials aim to determine a safe dose to be tested in larger trials for efficacy. In oncology, designs generally assume conventional monotonic increasing dose-toxicity relationships, mostly with binary outcomes (e.g., dose-limiting toxicity or not), measured in the first cycle of therapy or for a fixed number of cycles. However, with new anti-cancer agents such as molecularly targeted therapies and immunotherapies, late-onset toxicities have become more frequent. Designs with prolonged observation windows and censored endpoints analyzed using survival models, appear particularly suited to these settings. Moreover, in this setting, the observation of the late-onset toxicity endpoint could be precluded by trial discontinuation due to death, progression, patient withdrawal, or physician discretion, defining a competing event to toxicity. We propose extensions of the Continual Reassessment Method (CRM) dose-finding design using survival working models for right-censored endpoints and for handling treatment discontinuation in the toxicity observation window, namely the Survival-CRM (Surv-CRM) and the informative survival-CRM (iSurv-CRM). We also developed a benchmark approach for its evaluation. In a simulation study, we compared the performance of the Surv-CRM and iSurv-CRM, to those of the Time-to-event (TITE)-CRM and the nonparametric benchmark. The performance of the proposed methods was consistent with the complexity of scenarios as assessed by the nonparametric benchmark. Without treatment discontinuations, the Surv-CRM provides proportions of correct dose selection close to those of the TITE-CRM with fewer observed toxicities and patients assigned to overtoxic dose levels. In the presence of treatment discontinuation, the iSurv-CRM outperforms the TITE-CRM in identifying the correct dose level.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33222634
doi: 10.1080/10543406.2020.1821702
doi:
Substances chimiques
Antineoplastic Agents
0
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM