Abstract

BackgroundSimon’s two-stage designs are widely used for cancer phase II trials. These methods rely on statistical testing and thus allow controlling the type I and II error rates, while accounting for the interim analysis. Estimation after such trials is however not straightforward, and several different approaches have been proposed.MethodsDifferent approaches for point and confidence intervals estimation, as well as computation of p-values are reviewed and compared for a range of plausible trials. Cases where the actual number of patients recruited in the trial differs from the preplanned sample size are also considered.ResultsFor point estimation, the uniformly minimum variance unbiased estimator (UMVUE) and the bias corrected estimator had better performance than the others when the actual sample size was as planned. For confidence intervals, using a mid-p approach yielded coverage probabilities closer to the nominal level as compared to so-called ’exact’ confidence intervals. When the actual sample size differed from the preplanned sample size the UMVUE did not perform worse than an estimator specifically developed for such a situation. Analysis conditional on having proceeded to the second stage required adapted analysis methods, and a uniformly minimum variance conditional estimator (UMVCUE) can be used, which also performs well when the second stage sample size is slightly different from planned.ConclusionsThe use of the UMVUE may be recommended as it exhibited good properties both when the actual number of patients recruited was equal to or differed from the preplanned value. Restricting the analysis in cases where the trial did not stop early for futility may be valuable, and the UMVCUE may be recommended in that case.

Highlights

  • Simon’s two-stage designs are widely used for cancer phase II trials

  • In cancer phase II trials, therapeutic activity is typically defined in terms of tumor shrinkage [1,2], and a patient with tumor shrinkage is referred as a responder

  • As phase II trials primarily lead to the decision to proceed to a step in the evaluation of the therapeutic regimen or not, their design essentially relies on statistical testing

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Simon’s two-stage designs are widely used for cancer phase II trials These methods rely on statistical testing and allow controlling the type I and II error rates, while accounting for the interim analysis. Estimation after such trials is not straightforward, and several different approaches have been proposed. In cancer phase II trials, therapeutic activity is typically defined in terms of tumor shrinkage [1,2], and a patient with tumor shrinkage is referred as a responder The endpoint of such phase II trials is a binary endpoint (responder / nonresponder), and a new anticancer agent with too low a response rate should be excluded from further consideration. Many approaches have been proposed to reduce the bias or the mean squared error (MSE) of estimators in such a setting [7,9,10,11,12,13,14]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call