4.1 Article

Adaptive seamless designs: Selection and prospective testing of hypotheses

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOPHARMACEUTICAL STATISTICS
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 1135-1161

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10543400701645215

Keywords

adaptive designs; clinical trials; closure principle; combination tests; early data review; enrichment designs; flexible design; group sequential tests; interim analysis; meta-analysis; multiple testing; non-inferiority testing; nuisance parameters; phase II/III designs; sample size re-estimation; seamless designs; targeted designs; two-stage procedure; variance spending

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There is a current trend towards clinical protocols which involve an initial selection phase followed by a hypothesis testing phase. The selection phase may involve a choice between competing treatments or different dose levels of a drug, between different target populations, between different endpoints, or between a superiority and a non-inferiority hypothesis. Clearly there can be benefits in elapsed time and economy in organizational effort if both phases can be designed up front as one experiment, with little downtime between phases. Adaptive designs have been proposed as a way to handle these selection/testing problems. They offer flexibility and allow final inferences to depend on data from both phases, while maintaining control of overall false positive rates. We review and critique the methods, give worked examples and discuss the efficiency of adaptive designs relative to more conventional procedures. Where gains are possible using the adaptive approach, a variety of logistical, operational, data handling and other practical difficulties remain to be overcome if adaptive, seamless designs are to be effectively implemented.

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