Platform trials test multiple therapies in one indication, one therapy for multiple indications, or both. These novel clinical trial designs can dramatically increase the cost-effectiveness of drug development, leading to life-altering medicines for people suffering from serious illnesses, possibly at lower cost. Currently, the cost of drug development is unsustainable. Furthermore, there are particular problems in rare diseases and small biomarker defined subsets in oncology, where the required sample sizes for traditional clinical trial designs may not be feasible.
The editors recruited the key innovators in this domain. The 20 articles discuss trial designs from perspectives as diverse as quantum computing, patient’s rights to information, and international health.
The book begins with an overview of platform trials from multiple perspectives. It then describes impacts of platform trials on the pharmaceutical industry’s key stakeholders: patients, regulators, and payers. Next it provides advanced statistical methods that address multiple aspects of platform trials, before concluding with a pharmaceutical executive’s perspective on platform trials. Except for the statistical methods section, only a basic qualitative knowledge of clinical trials is needed to appreciate the important concepts and novel ideas presented.
Edited by:
Zoran Antonijevic,
Robert A. Beckman
Imprint: Chapman & Hall/CRC
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Weight: 453g
ISBN: 9780367732639
ISBN 10: 0367732637
Series: Chapman & Hall/CRC Biostatistics Series
Pages: 322
Publication Date: 18 December 2020
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Primary
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
I. Overview of Platform Clinical TrialsIntroductionRobert A. Beckman and Zoran AntonijevicI-SPY2: Unlocking the potential of the platform trialLaura Esserman, Nola Hylton, Smita Asare, Christina Yau, Doug Yee, Angie Demichele, Jane Perlmutter, Fraser Symmans, Laura van’t Veer, Jeff Matthews, Don Berry, and Anna BarkerThe challenges with Multi-arm targeted therapy trialsRyan J. Sullivan and Keith Flaherty. Basket trials at the confirmatory stageRobert A. Beckman and Cong ChenHarnessing Real World Data to Inform Platform Trial DesignDaphne A. Guinn, Subha Madhavan, and Robert A. BeckmanImpact of Platform Trials on Pharmaceutical FrameworksZoran Antonijevic, Edward Mills, Jonas Häggström, and Kristian Thorlund. II. StakeholdersFriends of Cancer Research Perspective on Platform trialsJeff D. Allen, Madison Wempe, Ryan Hohman, and Ellen Sigal Regulatory and Policy aspects of Platform trialsRasika Kalamegham, Ramzi Dagher, and Peter Honig Multi-arm, multi-drug trials from a reimbursement perspectiveAnja Schiel, and Olivier CollignonHighly Efficient Clinical Trials: A resource-saving solution for global healthEdward Mills, J
Zoran Antonijevic is Owner and Consultant of Z-Adaptive Design. He held executive positions in Pharmaceutical Companies and CROs and has designed more than 100 clinical trials in numerous therapeutic areas, many of which included adaptive designs. He has authored numerous papers and scientific presentations and edited Optimization of Pharmaceutical R&D Programs and Portfolios. Robert Beckman is Professor of Oncology and of Biostatistics, Bioinformatics, and Biomathematics at the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Innovation Center of Biomedical Informatics, Georgetown University Medical Center. He has played significant leadership roles in developing new oncology clinical research groups at four pharmaceutical companies, while co-inventing several novel clinical and statistical development strategies. His versatile publication record comprises more than 250 contributions ranging from computational chemistry to clinical oncology. The editors are past and current chairs of the Drug Information Association Adaptive Design Scientific Working Group, an international group of over 200 statisticians focused on novel clinical study designs and their role in bringing new medicines to patients.