Incorporation of healthy volunteers data on receptor occupancy into a phase II proof-of-concept trial using a Bayesian dynamic borrowing design.
Fulvio Di StefanoChristelle RodriguesStephanie GaltierSandrine GuilleminotVeronique RobertMauro GaspariniGaelle Saint-HilaryPublished in: Biometrical journal. Biometrische Zeitschrift (2023)
Receptor occupancy in targeted tissues measures the proportion of receptors occupied by a drug at equilibrium and is sometimes used as a surrogate of drug efficacy to inform dose selection in clinical trials. We propose to incorporate data on receptor occupancy from a phase I study in healthy volunteers into a phase II proof-of-concept study in patients, with the objective of using all the available evidence to make informed decisions. A minimal physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling is used to model receptor occupancy in healthy volunteers and to predict it in the patients of a phase II proof-of-concept study, taking into account the variability of the population parameters and the specific differences arising from the pathological condition compared to healthy volunteers. Then, given an estimated relationship between receptor occupancy and the clinical endpoint, an informative prior distribution is derived for the clinical endpoint in both the treatment and control arms of the phase II study. These distributions are incorporated into a Bayesian dynamic borrowing design to supplement concurrent phase II trial data. A simulation study in immuno-inflammation demonstrates that the proposed design increases the power of the study while maintaining a type I error at acceptable levels for realistic values of the clinical endpoint.
Keyphrases
- phase ii
- clinical trial
- open label
- phase ii study
- phase iii
- placebo controlled
- electronic health record
- double blind
- study protocol
- oxidative stress
- big data
- newly diagnosed
- randomized controlled trial
- end stage renal disease
- drug delivery
- locally advanced
- molecular dynamics
- ejection fraction
- machine learning
- cancer therapy
- binding protein
- emergency department
- patient reported outcomes
- molecular dynamics simulations
- combination therapy
- replacement therapy
- peritoneal dialysis