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An adaptive design for the identification of the optimal dose using joint modeling of continuous repeated biomarker measurements and time-to-toxicity in phase I/II clinical trials in oncology

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We present a new adaptive dose-finding method, based on a joint modeling of longitudinal continuous biomarker activity measurements and time to first dose limiting toxicity, with a shared random effect.… Click to show full abstract

We present a new adaptive dose-finding method, based on a joint modeling of longitudinal continuous biomarker activity measurements and time to first dose limiting toxicity, with a shared random effect. Estimation relies on likelihood that does not require approximation, an important property in the context of small sample sizes, typical of phase I/II trials. We address the important case of missing at random data that stem from unacceptable toxicity, lack of activity and rapid deterioration of phase I patients. The objective is to determine the lowest dose within a range of highly active doses, under the constraint of not exceeding the maximum tolerated dose. The maximum tolerated dose is associated to some cumulative risk of dose limiting toxicity over a predefined number of treatment cycles. Operating characteristics are explored via simulations in various scenarios.

Keywords: measurements time; phase; joint modeling; biomarker; toxicity; oncology

Journal Title: Statistical Methods in Medical Research
Year Published: 2019

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