A Case Study on the Optimal Design of Clinical Pharmacology Trials with Restrictions on the Dosing Schedule

A clinical pharmacology trial, which examines the safety and pharmacodynamics of an investigational drug, is typically the first time that the drug is administered to humans. We are, therefore, often forced to maintain some restrictions on the trial conditions; for example, incremental doses in succ...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJapanese Journal of Biometrics Vol. 30; no. 1; pp. 1 - 16
Main Authors Yoshimura, Isao, Hamada, Chikuma, Kikuchi, Kazuyo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published The Biometric Society of Japan 2009
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Summary:A clinical pharmacology trial, which examines the safety and pharmacodynamics of an investigational drug, is typically the first time that the drug is administered to humans. We are, therefore, often forced to maintain some restrictions on the trial conditions; for example, incremental doses in succeeding stages may be necessary when safety is concerned, and the repetition of the treatment on the same subject may be restricted in terms of the imposition on and convenience of subjects. The present paper investigated optimal trial designs under such restrictions, adopting Ds-optimality (D-optimality for subset) as the criterion. In order to identify the optimal design, all admissible designs that satisfy the restrictions were listed in a lexical order and their optimality was compared. As a result, it was revealed that a relatively high number of subjects were allocated lower doses in the optimal design when the increment restriction was regarded as relevant, whereas more reasonable designs were identified as optimal when the restrictions were modified.
ISSN:0918-4430
2185-6494
DOI:10.5691/jjb.30.1