Lecture 12: Drug development and clinical trials Flashcards
Long and costly drug development
- 10 years from discovery to market
- $3 billion per drug at least (partly due to 1/10 working)
- patent protection very important
biomarker/surrogate/outcome?
biomarker
- readily measuable marker of response
- eg. EEG response to anaesthetic induction agent
surrogate
- biomarker used for regulatory approval
- eg. reduction in HIV viral load
outcome
- how the patient functions/feels/survives
Phase 0
Predictions for humans
- data from non-human animals
- probable mechanism of action
- likely effective concentration*
- major routes of elimination*
- oral absorption properties*
* = similar in humans as in rats
Phase 1
Tolerability (different from tolerance)
- start with small doses and slowly increase
- stop when adverse effects noted
Phase 2
Effectiveness
PHASE 2A
- Proof of concept, the yes/no decision point
PHASE 2B
- learn about dose response curve
- learn about effective doses
- learn about taget concentration
Phase 3
Safety
- learn adverse effects in target population
- confirm effective doses
- Learn pharmacodynamics of surrogate/outcome
- Learn PK and PD covariates (age, sex, other drugs)
Phase 4
Post-marketing
- confirm effective dose(s)
- confirm common adverse events and learn about uncommon adverse events (1/10,000)
- learn “use effectiveness” (does it work in real life)
- learn pharmacoeconomics (use effectiveness)
Clinical Trial Design?
Assignment
Blinding
Comparison
Sequence
Assignment?
First come, First served
Randomised - balanced or stratified (age, previous stroke etc)
Blinding?
open
single (doctor knows)
doubble (neither investigtor or patient) -“doubble dummy”
tripple (error)
Comparison?
As well as a control group it pays to investigate within the trial group on the new drug or procedure.
Active - dose, conc and biomarker control
Placebo - inactive
standard treatment - non-inferiority, add-on
Sequence -Parallel
Parallel
- different treatments are assigned to different groups of subjects
- Good for finding out if the drug works but gives unclear answers to learning questions that ask about the shape of the dose response relationship of what dose is needed to achieve a particular effect.
EFFECTIVE, BUT NOT EFFICIENT
Sequence - crossover
Crossover
- Two or more treatments is used in each subject. Allows individual dose response curves to be observed and the true shape of the dose response relationship can be determined.
- Also may have advantages in terms of statistical power. If it is assumed that within subject variability is small, fewer subjects need to be studied to detect a treatment effect.
- Can have carryover effect, period effect
- higher risk of dropout due to several treatments needed.
Sequence - Titration
Forced
costant fixed doses given to all patients to learn about dose response relationship
Flexible
starting with lower dose and building up untill response is seen and then keeping it constant there
Analysis perspectives?
Intention to treat - looks at use effectiveness and a pharmacoeconomic perspective. Is always biased as use effectiveness includes people who don’t actually take the drug.
As treated - method effectiveness (more accurate) and develops a science perspective so useful for making scientific decisons. Only looks at people who took the drug as instructed.