Statistics and Its Interface

Volume 5 (2012)

Number 4

Doubly adaptive biased coin designs for balancing competing objectives in time-to-event trials

Pages: 401 – 413

DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4310/SII.2012.v5.n4.a3

Authors

Yevgen Ryeznik (Department of Mathematics, Kharkov National University of Economics, Kharkov, Ukraine)

Oleksandr Sverdlov (Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, East Hanover, New Jersey, U.S.A.)

Weng Kee Wong (Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of California at Los Angeles)

Abstract

Many clinical trials have multiple objectives and have a time-to-event outcome that may be modeled using aWeibull distribution. For two-arm trials, we obtain the optimal allocations for a few design criteria and for multi-arm trials, we provide a general approach for finding the optimal allocations. These multi-objective optimal designs meet userdefined tradeoffs among the objectives. We focus on twoobjective design problems for estimating model parameters and discriminating whether the treatments have constant hazard (exponential distribution) or non-constant hazard (general Weibull distribution). To target the desired allocations designs, we implement the doubly adaptive biased coin design (DBCD) of Hu and Zhang (2004) and evaluate its effectiveness. We compare performance of the various response-adaptive allocation strategies in an exemplary four-arm trial using a simulation study and show that our proposed response-adaptive randomization designs generally outperform a balanced design when ethics, randomization and estimation efficiency are incorporated at the onset.

Keywords

dual-objective clinical trial, compound-optimal design, doubly adaptive biased coin design, ethical concern, hazard ratio, randomization design

Published 16 November 2012