Design question [Design Issues]

posted by ElMaestro  – Denmark, 2014-08-15 19:37 (4330 d 16:42 ago) – Posting: # 13389
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❝ If I want to conduct a study with the following criteria:

❝ 1. Conduct dosing on all subjects


Good idea.

❝ 2. Conduct bioanalytical on the first 50% of the study population (i.e, subject 1 – x).


Bad idea. :-D

❝ 3. perform PK and BE assessment, and power:

❝    a. If passes BE and demonstrates acceptable power (>80%), conclude study based on 50% data.

❝    b. If fails BE, conduct bioanalytical on remaining 50% subjects and carry out pk and BE assessment with 100% data.

❝    c. If passes BE but fails power (<80%), conduct bioanalytical on remaining 50% of the subjects and carry out PK and BE with 100% data.


You are basically asking for a Potvin method with the modification that no true dimensioning is done, instead you rather gamble that doubling the number of subjects leads to success.

❝ Questions:


❝ 1. If I end up with option 3b or 3c, do I need to adjust for alpha?


Yes, most likely. You may need to simulate the stuff and prove which alpha would protect against Type I error inflation.

❝ 2. Is this design considered the same as a two-stage design (the tradition one)?


Eye of the beholder.... This is a new design so probably only John the Almighty and a few others have considered it until now. If you wish to call it a two-stage design then it is ok with moi.
Some weirdo published a paper that could have marginal relevance to you. Link here.
One issue: If you only allow for doubling the trial size after stage 1, then the trial will in most practical situations have a very, very low power cf the publication reffed above. So low, that it might very well be a waste of time and money, and likely be unethical.

Pass or fail!
ElMaestro

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