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A composite design for transition from a preliminary to a full‐scale study
Author(s) -
Lachin John M.,
Younes Naji
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
statistics in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.996
H-Index - 183
eISSN - 1097-0258
pISSN - 0277-6715
DOI - 10.1002/sim.2963
Subject(s) - type i and type ii errors , statistics , scale (ratio) , computer science , sample size determination , research design , sequential analysis , mathematics , medicine , reliability engineering , engineering , physics , quantum mechanics
Abstract In drug development, a sequence of studies are conducted to evaluate effectiveness (or efficacy) and safety, such as a Phase II study to assess pharmacological activity or safety that is then followed by a definitive Phase III study to assess clinical effectiveness. Rather than conducting separate successive studies, we describe a design in which the patients enrolled in a preliminary (e.g. Phase II) study are continued into a subsequent full‐scale (e.g. Phase III) study. This design also applies to a study that uses an internal pilot with a preliminary assessment of efficacy or safety. The combined preliminary to full‐scale design potentially reduces the total numbers of patients required and the total duration of the program. The design allows a futility or safety stopping boundary for the preliminary study result that is specified in terms of a lower critical Z ‐value( Z L ) and the pursuant type II error probability incurred under a specified alternative hypothesis of a beneficial effect or no toxicity at that stage. This boundary also leads to a deflation of the type I error probability for the final test at the completion of the full‐scale study, such that a critical value for the final test( Z F ) can be determined that provides the desired level of the type I error probability exactly. Thus, it is possible to determine sample sizes at the two stages, and critical values Z L and Z F that provide specified type I and II error probabilities for the combined study. We describe the design using large‐sample normally distributed Z ‐tests at the two phases, including a test for means, or proportions or survival times, or combinations thereof, such as a test for means at Phase II followed by a test for proportions at Phase III. We compare the properties of this design versus the conduct of two successive studies, and explore the factors that influence the operating characteristics of the design. We also discuss the practical considerations in the implementation of the design. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.