Abstract

Background and Significance: Parallel-group randomized controlled trials (PG-RCTs) are the gold standard for detecting differences in mean improvement across treatment conditions. However, PG-RCTs provide limited information about individuals, making them poorly optimized for quantifying the relationship of a biomarker measured at baseline with treatment response. In N-of-1 trials, an individual subject moves between treatment conditions to determine their specific response to each treatment. Aggregated N-of-1 trials analyze a cohort of such participants, and can be designed to optimize both statistical power and clinical or logistical constraints, such as allowing all participants to begin with an open-label stabilization phase to facilitate the enrollment of more acutely symptomatic participants. Here, we describe a set of statistical simulation studies comparing the power of four different trial designs to detect a relationship between a predictive biomarker measured at baseline and subjects' specific response to the PTSD pharmacotherapeutic agent prazosin.Methods: Data was simulated from 4 trial designs: (1) open-label; (2) open-label + blinded discontinuation; (3) traditional crossover; and (4) open label + blinded discontinuation + brief crossover (the N-of-1 design). Designs were matched in length and assessments. The primary outcome, analyzed with a linear mixed effects model, was whether a statistically significant association between biomarker value and response to prazosin was detected with 5% Type I error. Simulations were repeated 1,000 times to determine power and bias, with varied parameters.Results: Trial designs 2 & 4 had substantially higher power with fewer subjects than open label design. Trial design 4 also had higher power than trial design 2. Trial design 4 had slightly lower power than the traditional crossover design, although power declined much more rapidly as carryover was introduced.Conclusions: These results suggest that an aggregated N-of-1 trial design beginning with an open label titration phase may provide superior power over open label or open label and blinded discontinuation designs, and similar power to a traditional crossover design, in detecting an association between a predictive biomarker and the clinical response to the PTSD pharmacotherapeutic prazosin. This is achieved while allowing all participants to spend the first 8 weeks of the trial on open-label active treatment.

Highlights

  • Parallel-group randomized controlled trials (PG-RCTs) are the gold standard for detecting differences in mean improvement across treatment conditions [1]

  • Potential clinical trial designs were selected to allow the comparison of statistical power and bias across the four most plausible trial designs for testing the relationship of a baseline biomarker to treatment response: [1] a single-group open label trial, [2] a single-group open label trial followed by a blinded discontinuation block, [3] a traditional crossover trial, and [4] the proposed N-of-1 trial design, consisting of a single-group open label trial followed by first a blinded discontinuation block and two crossover blocks (Figure 2)

  • The statistical power to detect a relationship between the baseline biomarker and the response to prazosin treatment was significantly different among the four clinical trial designs

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Summary

Introduction

Parallel-group randomized controlled trials (PG-RCTs) are the gold standard for detecting differences in mean improvement across treatment conditions [1]. PG-RCTs provide limited information about the response of individuals to treatment, as they provide no information about the potential response to active treatment for those in the placebo group, and for those who do receive active treatment and experience clinical improvement, it is not possible to distinguish whether this improvement is treatment-specific, or whether the individual would have responded to placebo. This makes PGRCTs poorly optimized for quantifying the relationship of a biomarker measured at baseline to a treatment-specific response, or identifying subgroups of treatment-specific response [2]. We describe a set of statistical simulation studies comparing the power of four different trial designs to detect a relationship between a predictive biomarker measured at baseline and subjects’ specific response to the PTSD pharmacotherapeutic agent prazosin

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