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Coherence principles in intervalā€based dose finding

Authors :
Alexia Iasonos
Mark R. Conaway
Nolan A. Wages
John O'Quigley
Source :
Pharm Stat
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

This paper studies the notion of coherence in interval-based dose-finding methods. An incoherent decision is either: (i) a recommendation to escalate the dose following an observed dose-limiting toxicity, or (ii) a recommendation to de-escalate the dose following a non-dose-limiting toxicity. In a simulated example, we illustrate that the Bayesian optimal interval method and the Keyboard method are not coherent. We generated dose-limiting toxicity outcomes under an assumed set of true probabilities for a trial of n = 36 patients in cohorts of size 1, and we counted the number of incoherent dosing decisions that were made throughout this simulated trial. Each of the methods studied resulted in 13/36 (36%) incoherent decisions in the simulated trial. Additionally, for two different target dose-limiting toxicity rates, 20% and 30%, and a sample size of n = 30 patients, we randomly generated 100 dose-toxicity curves and tabulated the number of incoherent decisions made by each method in 1000 simulated trials under each curve. For each method studied, the probability of incurring at least one incoherent decision during the conduct of a single trial is greater than 75%. Coherency is an important principle in the conduct of dose-finding trials. Interval-based methods violate this principle for cohorts of size 1 and require additional modifications to overcome this shortcoming. Researchers need take a closer look at the dose assignment behavior of interval-based methods when using them to plan dose-finding studies.

Details

ISSN :
15391612 and 15391604
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pharmaceutical Statistics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0454918fddce6620660f14697ed2ef84
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pst.1974