Ravi
★    

India,
2008-09-25 09:13
(6473 d 03:41 ago)

Posting: # 2399
Views: 6,423
 

 More than 1 test; different strengths [General Sta­tis­tics]

Dear All,

I have one question. Suppose we have three formulation of a drug product (T1, T2, T3) in different dose and one reference product (R). We can check for BE between Test and reference product.
Now my question is can we check for Bioequivalence between T1, T2 and T3 knowing that all three test products are of different dose strength.

Regards,
Ravi Pandey

--
Edit: Subject line and category changed. [Helmut]

Thanks & Regards
Ravi Pandey
Helmut
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Vienna, Austria,
2008-09-25 14:55
(6472 d 22:00 ago)

@ Ravi
Posting: # 2402
Views: 5,252
 

 Dose linearity / multiplicity

Dear Ravi!

❝ Suppose we have three formulation of a drug product (T1, T2, T3) in different dose and one reference product (R). We can check for BE between Test and reference product.


Let’s assume your reference product is dosed with 100 mg, T1 with 25 mg, T2 with 50 mg, and T3 with 100 mg. If dose linearity (not proportionality!) is known from the literature or previous studies you may show BE of 4×T1=R, 2×T2=R, and T3=R.
But:
  • You may run into multiplicity issues; with three simultaneous comparisons at a level of 0.05, since the uncorrected error type I (patient’s risk) may increase to 1-(1-0.05)3=14.26% instead of 5%. Therefore it may be necessary to go with an adjusted α level of 0.05/3=0.167 or an confidence interval of 96.67% instead of 90%. The patient’s risk is kept <5% with 1-(1-0.05/3)3=4.92%. You will have to increase your sample size accordingly to maintain the desired power (see the example below).
  • The definition of dose linearity is a battleground. Most people use a power model (PK response = A · doseB), but there is not agreement about the goalposts of ‘allowed’ deviations of the exponent B from 1, not speaking about confidence intervals, necessary power, etc. You can avoid that by dosing test formulations at the same level as the reference. This approach is preferred by some regulators.

❝ Now my question is can we check for Bioequivalence between T1, T2 and T3 knowing that all three test products are of different dose strength.


Why? Are you trying to demonstrate dose linearity in the same study? You will increase the number of simultaneous comparisons even further from three to six (T1=R, T2=R, T3=R, 2×T1=T2, 4×T2=T3, 2×T2=T3). α level adjustments will call for testing at 0.05/6=0.00833 increasing the sample size.
Example: Expected deviation test from reference -5%, CVintra 20%, power 80%; 1 comparison (conventional 2×2 BE study) n=20, 3 comparisons (α 0.05/3) n=28, 6 comparisons (α 0.05/6) n=32.

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Ravi
★    

India,
2008-09-26 08:27
(6472 d 04:27 ago)

@ Helmut
Posting: # 2418
Views: 5,094
 

 Dose linearity / multiplicity

Dear HS,
Thanks for your quick reply but i am still not very clear :-(.
I am once again posting my question in different way.

My question is can we test for BE among T1, T2 and T3 using one of the test product as reference. When T1, T2 and T3 are available in dose strength 550mg, 850mg and 1150mg respectively. If yes please explain a bit about appropriate design to be used.


Thanks & Regards,
Ravi Pandey

Thanks & Regards
Ravi Pandey
Helmut
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Vienna, Austria,
2008-09-26 14:39
(6471 d 22:16 ago)

@ Ravi
Posting: # 2423
Views: 5,203
 

 Rationale?

Dear Ravi,

❝ My question is can we test for BE among T1, T2 and T3 using one of the test product as reference. When T1, T2 and T3 are available in dose strength 550mg, 850mg and 1150mg respectively. If yes please explain a bit about appropriate design to be used.


Still I don’t understand the rationale of the study. You said you wanted to compare all three tests vs. reference. So I assumed that
  • your drug/formulation is not suitable for a BCS-based biowaiver (not Class I, modified release), and
  • dose linearity is already known.
What’s the strength of the reference?
Why do you want to show BE between tests?
The design to be applied is straightforward – a 4-period 4-sequence Williams’ design (see this post). If you are not sure about PK linearity I would go with separate 2×2 studies. Imagine a situation where one of the three T/R-comparisons fails: You will have to submit the entire package to authorities, containing the first 4×4 study plus a repeated 2×2 of the failed formulation. Not so nice.

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