Abstract

Background:Experimental treatments pass through various stages of development. If a treatment passes through early-phase experiments, the investigators may want to assess it in a late-phase randomised controlled trial. An efficient way to do this is adding it as a new research arm to an ongoing trial while the existing research arms continue, a so-called multi-arm platform trial. The familywise type I error rate is often a key quantity of interest in any multi-arm platform trial. We set out to clarify how it should be calculated when new arms are added to a trial some time after it has started.Methods:We show how the familywise type I error rate, any-pair and all-pairs powers can be calculated when a new arm is added to a platform trial. We extend the Dunnett probability and derive analytical formulae for the correlation between the test statistics of the existing pairwise comparison and that of the newly added arm. We also verify our analytical derivation via simulations.Results:Our results indicate that the familywise type I error rate depends on the shared control arm information (i.e. individuals in continuous and binary outcomes and primary outcome events in time-to-event outcomes) from the common control arm patients and the allocation ratio. The familywise type I error rate is driven more by the number of pairwise comparisons and the corresponding (pairwise) type I error rates than by the timing of the addition of the new arms. The familywise type I error rate can be estimated using Šidák’s correction if the correlation between the test statistics of pairwise comparisons is less than 0.30.Conclusions:The findings we present in this article can be used to design trials with pre-planned deferred arms or to add new pairwise comparisons within an ongoing platform trial where control of the pairwise error rate or familywise type I error rate (for a subset of pairwise comparisons) is required.

Highlights

  • Many recent developments in clinical trials are aimed at speeding up research by making better use of resources

  • Our results indicate that the timing of adding a new experimental arm to an ongoing multi-arm trial – where the allocation ratio is often one or less, that is, more patients are recruited to the control arm – is almost irrelevant in terms of changing the value of the familywise type I error rate (FWER)

  • Our results show that under the design conditions, the correlation between the test statistics of pairwise comparisons is affected by the allocation ratio and the number of common control arm shared observations in continuous and binary outcomes and primary outcome events in trials with survival outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

Many recent developments in clinical trials are aimed at speeding up research by making better use of resources. Phase III clinical trials can take several years to complete in many disease areas, requiring considerable resources During this time, a promising new treatment which needs to be tested may emerge. The practical advantages of incorporating such a new experimental arm into an existing trial protocol have been clearly described before,[1,2,3,4] not least because it obviates the often lengthy process of initiating and launching a new trial which may compete for patients with the existing one. Methods: We show how the familywise type I error rate, any-pair and all-pairs powers can be calculated when a new arm is added to a platform trial. Conclusions: The findings we present in this article can be used to design trials with pre-planned deferred arms or to add new pairwise comparisons within an ongoing platform trial where control of the pairwise error rate or familywise type I error rate (for a subset of pairwise comparisons) is required

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