1 / 13

Development Plans: Study Design and Dose Selection

Development Plans: Study Design and Dose Selection. John Alexander, MD, MPH Deputy Director, Division of Pediatric and Maternal Health, CDER Pediatric Clinical Investigator Workshop Feb 28, 2019. Disclaimer slide.

whitney
Download Presentation

Development Plans: Study Design and Dose Selection

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Development Plans:Study Design and Dose Selection John Alexander, MD, MPH Deputy Director, Division of Pediatric and Maternal Health, CDER Pediatric Clinical Investigator Workshop Feb 28, 2019

  2. Disclaimer slide • This presentation reflects the views of the presenter, and should not be construed to represent FDA’s views or policies.

  3. Purpose • Describe study design considerations (in 15 minutes) • Focus on pediatric trial issues • Selected clinical protocol sections • Objectives • Background • Selection Criteria • Endpoints • Study Procedures • Dose selection • Safety (discussed in another presentation)

  4. My Perspective • Overview of pediatric protocols • FDA sees a wide range of protocols • First use to approved, widely-used agents • Context important to understanding determining the right study design • Comments on selected protocol section • For consideration in planning pediatric studies • For investigators reviewing a protocol

  5. Objectives • Should be stated, not always done • Goals of study • Type of study • Fit for purpose • Superiority, non-inferiority • Randomized withdrawal • Blinded or open-label • Is the type of study appropriate for the objectives?

  6. Study Background • Typically includes disease description • For pediatrics, epidemiology/age of onset • Other questions to answer • What is known about the drug/disease (in adults)? • Has the drug been used/approved for pediatric patients (in other conditions)? • What is the standard of care? • What makes this study the right next step? www.fda.gov

  7. Selection Criteria • To identify intended population for study • Sufficient for consistent population across study sites? • Homogeneity versus inclusivity • Age range • Exclusions for safety, risk/benefit • Review for relevance to intended pediatric population • Avoid laundry list • Investigator discretion • Often included, but has drawbacks • How does it affect enrolled population? • What is missing from other selection criteria?

  8. Endpoint(s) • Primary endpoint should be clearly identified • Clinically meaningful endpoints: direct measures of how a patient feels, functions, or survives • Objective measures • Often focus on quantitative • Patient-reported outcomes • Validation • Statistical analysis plan • Handling missing information

  9. Study Procedures • Should include detailed plan description • Often outlined by study visit • Requires careful review (inconsistencies) • Individually consider invasive procedures • Standard of care for pediatric patients • Not for research purposes only • Blood volume sampling • Measures of growth and development

  10. Dose Selection • Mechanism of Action • Not always known • Can be important to support reliance on in vitro or animal models • Receptor ontogeny • Prior adult studies • Exposure-matching • Pediatric-only conditions • Dose rationale/prospect of direct benefit • Dose for other conditions (relevance?)

  11. Dose Selection • Adequate dose exploration • Consider pilot study • Locally-acting drugs • Protocol considerations • Dose rationale often lacking, should have clear basis for chosen dose • Review administration instructions for pediatric patients

  12. Summary • Study design involves a complex interplay of factors that all contribute to the ability to conduct a trial • For pediatric studies, need to consider pediatric growth and development in the planning of a clinical trial

More Related