Open Access
December 2012 Bayesian Dose Finding for Combined Drugs with Discrete and Continuous Doses
Lin Huo, Ying Yuan, Guosheng Yin
Bayesian Anal. 7(4): 1035-1052 (December 2012). DOI: 10.1214/12-BA735

Abstract

The trend of treating patients with combined drugs has grown in cancer clinical trials. Often, evaluating the synergism of multiple drugs is the primary motivation for such drug-combination studies. To enhance patient response, a new agent is often investigated together with an existing standard of care (SOC) agent. Often, a certain amount of dosage of the SOC is administered in order to maintain at least some therapeutic effects in patients. For clinical trials involving a continuous-dose SOC and a discrete-dose agent, we propose a two-stage Bayesian adaptive dose-finding design. The first stage takes a continual reassessment method to locate the appropriate dose for the discrete-dose agent while fixing the continuous-dose SOC at the minimal therapeutic dose. In the second stage, we make a fine dose adjustment by calibrating the continuous dose to achieve the target toxicity rate as closely as possible. Dose escalation or de-escalation is based on the posterior estimates of the joint toxicity probabilities of combined doses. As the toxicity data accumulate during the trial, we adaptively assign each cohort of patients to the most appropriate dose combination. We conduct extensive simulation studies to examine the operating characteristics of the proposed two-stage design and demonstrate the design’s good performance with practical scenarios.

Citation

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Lin Huo. Ying Yuan. Guosheng Yin. "Bayesian Dose Finding for Combined Drugs with Discrete and Continuous Doses." Bayesian Anal. 7 (4) 1035 - 1052, December 2012. https://doi.org/10.1214/12-BA735

Information

Published: December 2012
First available in Project Euclid: 27 November 2012

zbMATH: 1330.62393
MathSciNet: MR3000023
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1214/12-BA735

Keywords: Combined drugs , continual reassessment method , maximum tolerated dose , phase I trial , Toxicity probability , Two-stage design

Rights: Copyright © 2012 International Society for Bayesian Analysis

Vol.7 • No. 4 • December 2012
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