From the Research and New Therapies Program (B.E.F., K.F., J.A.F.), Epilepsy Foundation of America, Landover, MD; Department of Neurology (D.F., J.A.F.), New York University, New York; Department of Neurology (M.B.), Hôpital la Salpêtrière, APHP/ICM, University Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France; Cincinnati Children's Research Foundation (T.G.), OH; University of Pennsylvania (J.M.), Philadelphia; LGS Foundation (Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome) (T.D.-S.), Bohemia; Mount Sinai School of Medicine (E.B.), New York, NY; Berry Consultants LLC and University of Central Florida College of Medicine (J.C.), Orlando; Eisai Inc. (J.F.), Woodcliff Lake, NJ; and Department of Neurology (N.B.F.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Neurology. 2017 Oct 3;89(14):1507-1515. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000004535. Epub 2017 Sep 6.
The randomized controlled trial is the unequivocal gold standard for demonstrating clinical efficacy and safety of investigational therapies. Recently there have been concerns raised about prolonged exposure to placebo and ineffective therapy during the course of an add-on regulatory trial for new antiepileptic drug approval (typically ∼6 months in duration), due to the potential risks of continued uncontrolled epilepsy for that period. The first meeting of the Research Roundtable in Epilepsy on May 19-20, 2016, focused on "Reducing placebo exposure in epilepsy clinical trials," with a goal of considering new designs for epilepsy regulatory trials that may be added to the overall development plan to make it, as a whole, safer for participants while still providing rigorous evidence of effect. This topic was motivated in part by data from a meta-analysis showing a 3- to 5-fold increased rate of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy in participants randomized to placebo or ineffective doses of new antiepileptic drugs. The meeting agenda included rationale and discussion of different trial designs, including active-control add-on trials, placebo add-on to background therapy with adjustment, time to event designs, adaptive designs, platform trials with pooled placebo control, a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic approach to reducing placebo exposure, and shorter trials when drug tolerance has been ruled out. The merits and limitations of each design were discussed and are reviewed here.
随机对照试验是证明研究性治疗临床疗效和安全性的明确金标准。最近,人们对新抗癫痫药物批准的附加监管试验(通常持续约 6 个月)期间因持续不受控制的癫痫而延长暴露于安慰剂和无效治疗的潜在风险提出了担忧。2016 年 5 月 19 日至 20 日举行的癫痫研究圆桌会议首次会议重点关注“减少癫痫临床试验中的安慰剂暴露”,目标是考虑用于癫痫监管试验的新设计,这些设计可能会被添加到整体开发计划中,以使其对参与者更安全,同时仍为效果提供严格的证据。这一主题部分是由一项荟萃分析的数据所推动,该分析显示,在随机分配至安慰剂或新抗癫痫药物无效剂量的参与者中,癫痫突然意外死亡的发生率增加了 3 至 5 倍。会议议程包括不同试验设计的原理和讨论,包括活性对照附加试验、背景治疗加安慰剂附加调整、事件时间设计、适应性设计、带有 pooled placebo control 的平台试验、减少安慰剂暴露的药代动力学/药效学方法,以及在排除药物耐受性的情况下进行较短的试验。讨论了每种设计的优缺点,并在此进行了回顾。