Vreman Rick A, Belitser Svetlana V, Mota Ana T M, Hövels Anke M, Goettsch Wim G, Roes Kit C B, Leufkens Hubert G M, Mantel-Teeuwisse Aukje K
Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Clinical Pharmacology, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences (UIPS), Utrecht University, The Netherlands.
The National Health Care Institute (ZIN), Diemen, The Netherlands.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2020 Jul;86(7):1306-1313. doi: 10.1111/bcp.14237. Epub 2020 Feb 21.
There is a trend for more flexibility in timing of evidence generation in relation to marketing authorization, including the option to complete phase III trials after authorization or not at all. This paper investigated the relation between phase II and III clinical trial efficacy in oncology.
All oncology drugs approved by the European Medicines Agency (2007-2016) were included. Phase II and phase III trials were matched based on indication and treatment and patient characteristics. Reported objective response rates (ORR), median progression-free survival (PFS) and median overall survival (OS) were analysed through weighted mixed-effects regression with previous treatment, treatment regimen, blinding, randomization, marketing authorization type and cancer type as covariates.
A total of 81 phase II-III matches were identified including 252 trials. Mean (standard deviation) weighted difference (phase III minus II) was -4.2% (17.4) for ORR, 2.1 (6.7) months for PFS and -0.3 (5.1) months for OS, indicating very small average differences between phases. Differences varied substantially between individual indications: from -46.6% to 47.3% for ORR, from -5.3 to 35.9 months for PFS and from -13.3 to 10.8 months for OS. All covariates except blinding were associated with differences in effect sizes for at least 1 outcome.
The lack of marked average differences between phases may encourage decision-makers to regard the quality of design and total body of evidence instead of differentiating between phases of clinical development. The large variability emphasizes that replication of study findings remains essential to confirm efficacy of oncology drugs and discern variables associated with demonstrated effects.
在与上市许可相关的证据生成时间安排上,存在一种更具灵活性的趋势,包括在获得许可后完成III期试验或根本不进行III期试验的选择。本文研究了肿瘤学中II期和III期临床试验疗效之间的关系。
纳入欧洲药品管理局(2007 - 2016年)批准的所有肿瘤学药物。II期和III期试验根据适应症、治疗方法和患者特征进行匹配。通过加权混合效应回归分析报告的客观缓解率(ORR)、中位无进展生存期(PFS)和中位总生存期(OS),将先前治疗、治疗方案、盲法、随机分组、上市许可类型和癌症类型作为协变量。
共确定了81对II - III期匹配试验,包括252项试验。ORR的平均(标准差)加权差异(III期减去II期)为-4.2%(17.4),PFS为2.1(6.7)个月,OS为-0.3(5.1)个月,表明各阶段之间的平均差异非常小。个体适应症之间的差异差异很大:ORR为-46.6%至47.3%,PFS为-5.3至35.9个月,OS为-13.3至10.8个月。除盲法外,所有协变量至少与1项结果的效应大小差异相关。
各阶段之间缺乏明显的平均差异可能会促使决策者关注设计质量和证据总体,而不是区分临床开发阶段。巨大的变异性强调,重复研究结果对于确认肿瘤学药物的疗效和识别与已证实疗效相关的变量仍然至关重要。