A Generalized Phase I/II Dose Optimization Trial Design With Multi-Categorical and Multi-Graded Outcomes

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalStat. Med.
Year 2025
Pursuing accurate observations and rational assumptions always drives advances in clinical trial design. In recent years, more trials have begun to collect multi-graded outcomes for more informative analyses. At the same time, assumptions other than the traditional monotonicity relationship have been considered in the dose-efficacy curve to be more realistic. Inspired by these two trends, we propose a phase I/II design that simultaneously considers multi-categorical toxicity and efficacy with multi-graded outcomes, measured as quasi-continuous probability based on prespecified weight matrices of clinical significance. Following keyboard design, our approach aims to screen out overly toxic doses by the toxicity probability intervals and adaptively makes dose escalation or de-escalation decisions by comparing the posterior distributions of dose desirability (utility) among the adjacent levels of the current dose. It helps to more accurately identify the OBD in a non-monotonically increasing dose-efficacy relationship. We also comprehensively present the safety, accuracy and reliability performance through numerical simulations in multiple scenarios and compare the results with several already available designs. The benchmarking results of multiple operating characteristics convincingly support that our design leads in overall performance while ensuring robustness.
Epistemonikos ID: 9274ff6229dd106f1edd9a3da701cc6782024480
First added on: Apr 12, 2025