Faculty, Staff and Student Publications
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Journal
Statistics in Biopharmaceutical Research
DOI
10.1080/19466315.2024.2368802
PMID
39877140
PMCID
PMC11774480
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
7-31-2025
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Author MSS
Abstract
Conventionally, dose finding trials are based on dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) that only captures the most severe toxicities, e.g., treatment related grade 3 or higher toxicity according to the NCI Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events. However, this approach is often problematic for certain novel targeted therapies and immunotherapies, which may not induce DLT within a clinically active dose range and are often characterized by low grade toxicities. This important issue has been highlighted and discussed in the American Statistical Association (ASA) Biopharmaceutical (BIOP) Section Open Forums, and is also an important consideration of the Project Optimus initiated by FDA to “reform the dose optimization and dose selection paradigm in oncology drug development.” In this paper, we propose an easy-to-implement model-assisted Bayesian design, known as multiple toxicity keyboard (MT-Keyboard) design, to incorporate toxicity grades and types into dose finding. The MT-Keyboard design is able to accommodate binary, quasi-binary and continuous toxicity endpoints that are constructed to account for toxicity grades and types. We further extend the MT-Keyboard design, referred to as TITE-MT-Keyboard, to accommodate late-onset toxicity using the approximated likelihood approach. Simulation shows that the MT-Keyboard and TITE-MT-Keyboard designs have desirable operating characteristics, comparable to or better than some existing designs. A web-based software to implement the design will be freely available at www.trialdesign.org.
Keywords
Model-assisted design, Toxicity grades, Toxicity types, Late-onset toxicity, Phase I trials, Bayesian design
Published Open-Access
yes
Recommended Citation
Kai Chen, Li Wang, and Ying Yuan, "MT-Keyboard: A Bayesian Model-assisted Interval Design to Account for Toxicity Grades and Types for Phase I Trials" (2024). Faculty, Staff and Student Publications. 5188.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/uthgsbs_docs/5188
Included in
Bioinformatics Commons, Biomedical Informatics Commons, Genetic Phenomena Commons, Medical Genetics Commons, Oncology Commons