Speaker:
Naitee Ting
Pfizer, Inc
Time and Place: 3:30 p.m., Friday, March 2, 2007, 14 Allen
Title:
Dose Finding in Drug Development - Study Design Considerations
Abstract:
In the process of drug discovery and drug development, understanding
the dose-response relationship is one of the most challenging tasks.
It is also critical to identify the right range of doses in early
stages of clinical development so that Phase III trials can be
designed to confirm these doses. Usually at the beginning of Phase
II, there is not a lot of available information to help guiding the
study design. At this stage, Phase II clinical studies are needed
to establish proof of concept (PoC), to identify a set of
potentially effective and safe doses, and to estimate dose-response
relationships.
Challenges in designing these studies include: selection of the dose
frequency and the dose range, choice of clinical endpoints or
biomarkers, and use of control(s), among others. Consequences of
bad Phase II study designs may lead to the delay of the entire
clinical development program or the waste of R\&D investment.
Misleading results obtained from poor designs could cause a Phase
III program to confirm a wrong set of doses, or to stop developing a
potentially useful drug. Therefore, it is critical to consider an
entire drug development plan, to make best use of all the available
information, and to include all relevant experts in designing Phase
II dose response clinical trials. This presentation discusses some
of these considerations.
Host:
Dongfeng Wu,
(662) 325-7150, dwu@math.msstate.edu
Refreshments: 3:00-3:30 p.m., 467 Allen
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