Trial Design 2013 - The Northeast ALS Consortium
Transcription
Trial Design 2013 - The Northeast ALS Consortium
The Northeast ALS Consortium ALS and the Clinical Trial Process Jeremy M. Shefner, MD, PhD Professor and Chair of Neurology Associate VP for Clinical and Translational Research SUNY Upstate Medical University Bottleneck in Drug Development Industry ? Academic Labs In vitro In vivo Phase I Multiple drug candidates Preclinical Testing Phase II Small pool of patients Limited resources Phase III Time for development New Drugs and Devices Approved by US Food and Drug Administration by Sector, 1998-2004 Moses, H. et al. JAMA 2005;294:1333-1342. Clinical Trial Definitions Phase I Designed to evaluate safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (how a drug behaves in the body) May be performed with normal volunteers or subjects with disease Doses that have no effect, maximum tolerated dose determined here Placebos are almost always a part of these trials Phase II Gain more information on dosing issues and tolerability Look for signal of drug activity This is a specific problem in ALS; no validated targets, disease markers Placebo control often used, but not always Phase III Definitive evaluation of drug efficacy and tolerability Always involve use of placebo Phase 1 Studies These are the “first in human” studies Primary purposes: To assess safety and tolerability To assess the maximum tolerated dose To learn about pharmacokinetics Two main designs Predetermined dose escalation in small numbers of subjects Continual Reassessment Method Pharmacokinetics How is a drug absorbed? Where does it go? Does it get into the brain? How long does it stay there? How does the body eliminate it? Kidneys Liver What other drugs interact with it? Phase 2 Goals Preliminary evidence of effect on target EXPLORATORY Go-no go decision Confirmatory trial can follow later Risks Select an intervention that truly does not work Discard an intervention that truly does work Phase 2 Variable designs and goals In target population Not intended to definitely show that drug “works” Moderate in size and duration Often have placebo group Range of doses Often look at intermediate effects/biomarkers Statistically more flexible Phase 3 Confirmatory Definite efficacy trial Further safety experience Large, simple High power Avoid falsely concluding that drug works Phase 3 Study population clearly defined Study measures well understood Clear criteria for “success” Should lead to change in practice, not “just” publication What makes a successful trial? – – – – – – A drug with good preclinical science Adequate pharmacokinetic information The appropriate dose An easily measured outcome relevant to disease progression An effective design Sample size and power that depend on the trial goals. Dose is important both in early and late design stages Need dose ranging in vitro and animal studies, assessing both no effect levels and toxic doses If possible, need multiple dose human studies, also to maximum tolerated dose (MTD) MTD can be established in volunteers, usually with small sample sizes MTD is often not determined in ALS studies Expense Sample size requirements Lack of appropriate animal toxicology Dosing Questions That Still Remain Stroke– how much aspirin is ideal? Multiple sclerosis- how much interferon, copaxone is best? Myasthenia Gravis- steroids, immunomodulation, thymectomy lack adequate studies Anticonvulsants: older drugs with dosing information; newer ones are less clear Phase 2A dose ranging study of Arimoclomol in subjects with ALS 80 subjects, treated with placebo or three doses of arimoclomol Study duration: 12 weeks Serum Concentrations of Arimoclomol Male and Female Subjects Combined Male and Female Composite Plasma Arimoclomol Conc, ng/mL 1000 75 mg 150 mg 300 mg 100 10 Baseline Week 4 1 0 4 8 12 0 4 8 12 Time, Hour From: Cudkowicz, Shefner et al., 2008 Arimoclomol Penetrates the Human Blood:Brain Barrier: CSF levels 180 Arimoclomol (ng/mL) 160 3 hr 6 hr 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Placebo From: Cudkowicz, Shefner et al., 2008 75 mg 150 mg 300 mg Study Conclusions Arimoclomol was deemed safe and well tolerated Arimoclomol crossed the blood brain barrier and displayed a dose dependent increase in CSF levels Preliminary serum arimoclomol pharmacokinetics show no accumulation or auto-induction. However, no MTD was reached, and higher doses were thought most appropriate for further study. Higher doses were not supported by available preclinical toxicology For this reason, a phase IIb study in ALS was not performed In Late Phase Studies, Dose selection can Determine Outcome Minocycline in ALS Preclinical science supported an action against cell death Phase I/II trial (Gordon, 2004) 100 mg per day not associated with drug related negative effects (adverse events, or AEs), no change in efficacy measures 400 mg/day, in crossover study with placebo, associated with GI AEs (p=0.057), and faster progression Minocycline in ALS A Phase III trial performed using lead-in phase, then randomization of 412 subjects to placebo or 400 mg/day for 9 months Slope during lead-in ALSFRS-R VC MMT -0.81 (0.05) -2.31 (0.16) -0.19 (0.01) Conclusion ? From Gordon, et al., 2007 On Treatment Slope Placebo Minocycline -1.07 (0.07) -3.01 (0.20) -0.26 (0.02) -1.30 (0.07) -3.48 (0.21) -0.30 (0.02) P 0.005 0.111 0.112 Other examples of problems related to dose selection in ALS Trials Topiramate 800 mg/d caused massive weight loss, associated loss of strength- would a lower dose have shown a signal? Creatine 5-10 mg/d not well matched to mouse datawould higher doses have been effective? Celecoxib 800 mg/day was ineffective- no toxicity was seen; should higher doses have been studied? Safety Always monitored, regardless of phase Side effects can be uncommon Often discovered only in Phase 3 or post –marketing General population may be different than those in trial Outcome Measures in ALS Clinically Relevant Endpoints How a patient feels, functions, or survives Surrogate Endpoints A laboratory value, image, or objective assessment intended to substitute for or predict a clinically relevant outcome Some Biomarkers Mechanistic, Pharmacokinetic Endpoints Direct measurement of drug levels or effect on identified physiological process Not necessarily clinically relevant, not a surrogate for another endpoint Survival as an Outcome in ALS Useful only when events are likely to occur ALS Treatments other than the experimental drug may have an effect Tracheostomy ventilation NIPPV Feeding tube and mechanical Survival as an Outcome Measure in ALS MICE From: Drachman et al., 2000 PEOPLE From Lacomblez et al., 1996 How Could Biomarkers Help? Could be less variable than clinical measures Could change more rapidly Would allow smaller, shorter trials Target based pharmacodynamic markers establish whether drug hits the intended target Easier to discard drug classes However Biomarker research is a hot area, but targets are still not obvious Disease progression biomarkers are thus far not validated MUNE EIM Biofluids Target based biomarkers require an accessible target Other Hot Topics The importance of trial design The therapeutic misconception Importance of informed consent Placebo control Historical controls Prediction of likely progression Expanded access Open label follow on studies Expanded access prior to drug approval Natural History Lead In Goal is to reduce variance of outcome measure Hypothesis is that individuals differ in rate of progression, and that this rate is constant By estimating rate of decline with lead in, can use this as covariate in analysis, and reduce sample size. Problems Delays onset of active treatment Recruitment is difficult If decline is non linear, early decline may not predict late decline ALSFRS-R Phase IIb Controlled Trial of TCH 346 in ALS placebo 2.5 mg 7.5 mg 1.0 mg 15 mg From Miller et al., 2007 week Futility Designs Normally, null hypothesis is that there is no underlying effect of drug on disease In a futility study, the null hypothesis is that it is non futile to go forward with further investigation Rejecting the null means concluding futility; probability of rejecting the null depends on the type I error rate, which is set by investigator Often, if there is no difference between groups, non futility will still be concluded Avoiding Therapeutic Misconception High quality information Set realistic expectations Education Thoughtful communication Historical Controls Only appropriate if outcome measure is stable over time- not true for survival 63% alive Lacomblez, 1996 Celebrex placebo group: 90 of 99 (90%) patients alive at 1 year Cudkowicz et al., 2006 Historical Controls ALSFRS has not systematically changed over many studies and many years 0.85 units per month Cudkowicz et al., 2006 0.84 units per month Shefner et al., 2003 But, average ALSFRS decline in Empower study was about 1.1 points per month Mean Change in ALSFRS Total Score Open Label Trial of Coenzyme Q in ALS ALSFRS compared to placebo group in Celecoxib study. From Ferrante et al., 2005 Coenzyme Q10 Placebo 0 -2 -4 -6 -8 -10 0 2 4 Months 6 8 Expanded Access For subjects who have completed a clinical trial For the wider ALS community Prior to phase 3 Subsequent to phase 3 How can we improve our trials? Pay attention to dose Demonstrate drug gets to target Make sure we are asking the right questions Continue search for markers of drug activity Continue search for biomarkers indicative of disease activity