Bayesian Adaptive Dose-Finding Clinical Trial Designs with Late-Onset Outcomes

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Date
2021-07
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American English
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Ph.D.
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2021
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Indiana University
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Abstract

The late-onset outcome issue is common in early phase dose- nding clinical trials. This problem becomes more intractable in phase I/II clinical trials because both toxicity and e cacy responses are subject to the late-onset outcome issue. The existing methods applying for the phase I trials cannot be used directly for the phase I/II trial due to a lack of capability to model the joint toxicity{e cacy distribution. We propose a conditional weighted likelihood (CWL) method to circumvent this issue. The key idea of the CWL method is to decompose the joint probability into the product of marginal and conditional probabilities and then weight each probability based on each patient's actual follow-up time. We further extend the proposed method to handle more complex situations where the late-onset outcomes are competing risks or semicompeting risks outcomes. We treat the late-onset competing risks/semi-competing risks outcomes as missing data and develop a series of Bayesian data-augmentation methods to e ciently impute the missing data and draw the posterior samples of the parameters of interest. We also propose adaptive dose- nding algorithms to allocate patients and identify the optimal biological dose during the trial. Simulation studies show that the proposed methods yield desirable operating characteristics and outperform the existing methods.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
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