BE and gender (recent lenghty example) [General Sta­tis­tics]

posted by Helmut Homepage – Vienna, Austria, 2013-06-12 15:45 (4756 d 14:55 ago) – Posting: # 10776
Views: 7,080

Dear Dan & all!

❝ Maybe it would be helpful (at least interesting) to have a look at this thread:


THX for bringing this goodie back to our attention!

I like to share another story with you. Within 2000 and 2007 we performed six studies with MPH. As this was our standard we included both sexes. Furthermore, no gender-related difference in PK are reported in the literature. The last protocol was not accepted by the German BfArM:

A justification according to §7(2)12 GCP-V1 why the chosen sex distribution in the group of trial subjects is appropriate in order to identify possible sex-specific differences in the effi­cacy or safety of the investigational medicinal product being tested is missing.
The intended participation of healthy female volunteers of childbearing age in this phase I clinical trial is generally to be justified because the applicant apparently does not plan to inves­tigate gender differences and the investigational medicinal products are contra­indi­cated during pregnancy. A comparison between male and female subjects is not included in the stat­is­tics section.

:confused:
We gave in and added an explorative analysis of gender differences2 to the SAP. In subsequent studies the sponsor opted for males only… :lookaround:

In the course of a type II variation this year the RMS Germany raised in their Preliminary Variation Assessment Report (PVAR) the following Question (in V.2.3 Clinical efficacy):Oh no, not again! My response (pending) – reassessing all mixed-gender studies:
  1. Extending the common statistical model to assess bioequivalence (effects: sequence, subject within sequence, period, and formulation) by two fixed effects:
    • gender
    • treatment-by-gender interaction
  2. Subjecting the main PK metric for extent of absorption (AUCt) to regression analyses:
    • dose adjusted by gender (logistic regression)
    • dose adjusted by body weight (linear regression)
    • dose adjusted by body weight (LR, stratified by gender)
  3. Setting up a Population PK model: One-compartment open with extravascular administration; two absorption compartments (both receiving 50% of the total dose) with independent rates of absorption (ka1, ka2) and lag-times (tlag1, tlag2) and a common rate of elimination (kel). Three models were compared:
    • Simple model
    • Covariate model 1 (body weight ⇒ V)
    • Covariate model 2 (body weight ⇒ V, gender ⇒ V, kel)
Outcome: There was a weak (i.e., nonsignificant) correlation between body weight and AUCt, inde­pen­dent from sex. Body weight as a covariate in the PopPK model clearly improved fits. Everything else was just a complete waste of time.


    References:
  1. German Ordinance on the implementation of Good Clinical Practice in the conduct of clinical trials on medicinal products for use in humans (GCP Ordinance – GCP-V)
  2. Schütz H, Fischer R, Großmann M, Mazur D, Leis HJ, Ammer R. Lack of bioequivalence between two methylphenidate extended modified release formulations in healthy volunteers. Int J Clin Pharm Ther. 2009;47(12):761–9. doi 10.5414/CPP47761

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