Blue Book: Clinical Trails Flashcards
What are the aims of a Phase 1 Clinical Trail?
Determine toxicity (previously tested in vitro/in animals) and establish the maximum tolerated dose.
In general, 3 patients are treated and dose escalation is performed from 10% of dose to that was lethal in 10% of mice.
Patients with any tumour, in whom no conventional therapy is appropriate.
Phase 2?
Anti-tumor acitivty in a range of cancers. The radiological tumour shrinkage (response rate) is the primary measure.
Is it an improvement to existing options?
Phase 3?
Randomised trails comparing new with established treatment. Endpoints:
What measurements can be used to assess tumor response?
Tumor growth/shrinkage: radioloigcally, measure the longest diameter (LD).
Complete response: disappearance
Partial response: 30% decrease in LD.
Progression: 20% increase in LD
Stable disease: Neither shrinkage or increase.
Frequently patients cannot be classified to lack of data, follow up, withdrawal or death. If exlcude= bias.
Final analysis should be intention to treat basis.
How to measure survival?
Overall survival: length of time between entry to trail and death of any cause.
Disease free survival: time between entry to trail and recurrence of tumour or death.
Time to progression: time between entry to trial and disease progression or recurrence.
What else can be measured?
Toxicity using WHO toxiticity criteria.
QoL
Discuss:
Randomisiation.
Number of patients
Survival curves
Randomisation: reduce bias, maybe aware of treatment or blinded.
N.O.P: determined by size of effect and statistical significance. Small effect, high significance= large. Big effect (20% response rate) few patients (14) required.
Survival curves: probability of survival against time. Medical survival and survival rate at 5 years can be estimated.