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The Design of Phase II Clinical Trials Testing Cancer Therapeutics: Consensus Recommendations from the Clinical Trial Design Task Force of the National Cancer Institute Investigational Drug Steering Committee

03/2010

Journal Article

Authors:
Seymour, L.; Ivy, S.; Sargent, D.; Spriggs, D.; Baker, L.; Rubinstein, L.; Ratain, M.; Le Blanc, M.; Stewart, D.; Crowley, J.; Groshen, S.; Humphrey, J.; West, P.; Berry, D.

Secondary:
Clin Cancer Res

Volume:
16

Pagination:
1764-1769

URL:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20215557

Keywords:
Clinical Trials as Topic; Drugs-Investigational; Endpoint Determination; National Cancer Institute (US); Neoplasms; Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Research Design; Research NIH Extramural; Tumor Markers

Abstract:
The optimal design of phase II studies continues to be the subject of vigorous debate, especially studies of newer molecularly targeted agents. The observations that many new therapeutics "fail" in definitive phase III studies, coupled with the numbers of new agents to be tested as well as the increasing costs and complexity of clinical trials, further emphasize the critical importance of robust and efficient phase II design. The Clinical Trial Design Task Force (CTD-TF) of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Investigational Drug Steering Committee (IDSC) has published a series of discussion papers on phase II trial design in Clinical Cancer Research. The IDSC has developed formal recommendations about aspects of phase II trial design that are the subject of frequent debate, such as endpoints (response versus progression-free survival), randomization (single-arm designs versus randomization), inclusion of biomarkers, biomarker-based patient enrichment strategies, and statistical design (e.g., two-stage designs versus multiple-group adaptive designs). Although these recommendations in general encourage the use of progression-free survival as the primary endpoint, randomization, inclusion of biomarkers, and incorporation of newer designs, we acknowledge that objective response as an endpoint and single-arm designs remain relevant in certain situations. The design of any clinical trial should always be carefully evaluated and justified based on characteristic specific to the situation.

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