AngusMcLean
★★  

USA,
2013-06-11 22:17
(4751 d 02:44 ago)

Posting: # 10771
Views: 8,043
 

 BE and gender [General Sta­tis­tics]

We have done a BE study in normal volunteers using equal numbers of male and female subjects. I ran the BE data analysis in the usual way in Phoenix WinNonlin 6.3 and obtained the confidence intervals.

Since we suspect a gender difference for this drug I then included gender in the model as recommended by Helmut (see below)

"Have a column denoting gender (0/1, f/m, whateveryoulike...) and map it in the BE setup as "Classification".
Model Specification (Fixed Effects):
sequence+period+treatment+gender+treatment*gender

Example from one of my studies (6×3 Williams’ design):"

I repeated my data analysis for BE and I found that the confidence intervals were slightly different. The outcome for the BE assessment was not changed.

The ANOVA p value was 0.08 so the gender effect was not significant. Under what circumstances would one use the BE data analysis with gender in the model.

Angus


Edit: Category changed. Plese don’t use all capitals in the future. [Helmut]
ElMaestro
★★★

Denmark,
2013-06-11 22:47
(4751 d 02:15 ago)

@ AngusMcLean
Posting: # 10772
Views: 6,890
 

 BE and gender

Hi Angus,

❝ The ANOVA p value was 0.08 so the gender effect was not significant. Under what circumstances would one use the BE data analysis with gender in the model.


This is in my opinion just like a group effect. I wouldn't worry too much about a plain gender effect; in CO studies it will be a between-factor anyway, and genders do differ in terms of size, shape, plasma volume and just about anything else. Gender x Treatment is another matter; it would be a very surprising finding if it comes out significant and could in my opinion be followed up by additional questions; ideally this is only academic - wouldn't want to have a study with [Women, Test] being different from [Women, Ref]= [Men, Test]=[Men, Ref] and so on.
Since we don't deal with group x treatment effects in other types of studies I think one could along the same lines often justify a model without gender effects unless there is a specific reason to think otherwise. Same could be said for hair color, music preference or anamnetic presence of altitude sickness among relatives.

Pass or fail!
ElMaestro
Dr_Dan
★★  

Germany,
2013-06-12 11:57
(4750 d 13:05 ago)

@ AngusMcLean
Posting: # 10775
Views: 6,771
 

 BE and gender

Dear Angus
Maybe it would be helpful (at least interesting) to have a look at this thread:
Kind regards
Dan

Kind regards and have a nice day
Dr_Dan
Helmut
★★★
avatar
Homepage
Vienna, Austria,
2013-06-12 15:45
(4750 d 09:16 ago)

@ Dr_Dan
Posting: # 10776
Views: 7,066
 

 BE and gender (recent lenghty example)

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):
  • The Applicant is asked to clarify if in PK studies in healthy adult subjects resp. adult patients gender related differences of the pharmacokinetic properties have been seen.
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

Dif-tor heh smusma 🖖🏼 Довге життя Україна! [image]
Helmut Schütz
[image]

The quality of responses received is directly proportional to the quality of the question asked. 🚮
Science Quotes
AngusMcLean
★★  

USA,
2013-06-15 17:10
(4747 d 07:51 ago)

@ Dr_Dan
Posting: # 10801
Views: 6,284
 

 BE and gender

Dr._Dan: Thank you for directing me towards this interesting discussion. It appears to me that the trend of the results of the two studies indicate to me that exposure of the drug in males is higher than females for both studies. It just so happens that in the second study the difference was less pronounced. No; it is not a statistical artifact. The formulations are different.
I am thinking that we have a modified release formulation here and the rate of absorption of the drug is different between the two formulations (test and Reference). The test formulation is slower absorbing?
Could it be that the difference in genders is due to the more pronounced metabolism of the drug by females relative to males?

Are you allowed to say if the drug is highly metabolized?

Angus
UA Flag
Activity
 Admin contact
23,653 posts in 4,991 threads, 1,570 registered users;
122 visitors (0 registered, 122 guests [including 22 identified bots]).
Forum time: 01:02 CEST (Europe/Vienna)

I have never in my life learned anything
from any man who agreed with me.    Dudley Field Malone

The Bioequivalence and Bioavailability Forum is hosted by
BEBAC Ing. Helmut Schütz
HTML5