Coates Simon, Täubel Jörg, Lorch Ulrike
Richmond Pharmacology, St George's University, Cranmer Terrace, London, SW17 0RE, UK.
Cardiovascular and Cell Sciences Institute, St George's University, Cranmer Terrace, London, UK.
Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2019 Apr;75(4):483-496. doi: 10.1007/s00228-018-02607-8. Epub 2018 Dec 19.
Stopping rules are an essential part of risk management in early phase clinical trials. As well as being necessary for ensuring the safety of participants on clinical trials, they are also a requirement under the revision to the European Medicine Agency's first-in-human and early clinical trial guideline. The increasing complexity and size of modern trial designs (e.g. integrated trials) raise potential issues with risk management, which, if also too complex, presents challenges for both regulators and investigators to implement. Therefore, there is a clear need for a standard, template, or algorithm-based approach to risk management, in particular rules concerning adverse reactions. The purpose of this manuscript is to present template stopping (or adverse reaction, AR) rules that fulfil regulatory requirements and that can be adapted, taking into account trial design, nature of the investigational medicinal product, and anticipated effects.
The template AR rules that use a systematic, objective and consistent process were developed, taking into account severity (using an objective grading system), seriousness, frequency and reversibility of ARs. These rules control decisions relating to individual trial participants, dosing regimens and dose escalation and/or progression to successive trial parts. For ease of use, the template rules consist of a single, one-page table.
The template AR rules have been successfully applied to many early phase adaptive integrated trials that received regulatory authorisation and were performed in the UK. This manuscript presents the template rule table and case studies of some trial-specific adaptations.
This work demonstrates how a systematic, objective and consistent approach to risk management of large integrated trials can be simple yet robust, facilitating effective decision making and trial progression whilst safeguarding participant safety.
终止规则是早期临床试验风险管理的重要组成部分。它不仅是确保临床试验参与者安全所必需的,也是欧洲药品管理局对首次人体和早期临床试验指南修订后的一项要求。现代试验设计(如整合试验)的复杂性和规模不断增加,给风险管理带来了潜在问题,如果过于复杂,会给监管机构和研究者的实施带来挑战。因此,显然需要一种基于标准、模板或算法的风险管理方法,特别是关于不良反应的规则。本手稿的目的是提出符合监管要求的模板终止(或不良反应,AR)规则,这些规则可以根据试验设计、研究用药品的性质和预期效果进行调整。
制定了使用系统、客观和一致流程的模板AR规则,同时考虑了AR的严重程度(使用客观分级系统)、严重性、频率和可逆性。这些规则控制与个体试验参与者、给药方案以及剂量递增和/或进入后续试验部分相关的决策。为便于使用,模板规则由一个单页表格组成。
模板AR规则已成功应用于许多在英国进行并获得监管批准的早期适应性整合试验。本手稿展示了模板规则表以及一些针对特定试验的调整案例研究。
这项工作展示了如何以系统、客观和一致的方法对大型整合试验进行风险管理,这种方法既简单又稳健,有助于在保障参与者安全的同时进行有效的决策和试验推进。