Summary. We propose a phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series of administrations of a fixed dose of an investigational agent. In contrast with traditional phase I trials that are designed solely to find the maximum tolerated dose of the agent, our design instead identifies a maximum tolerated schedule that includes a maximum tolerated dose as well as a vector of recommended administration times. Our model is based on a non-mixture cure model that constrains the probability of dose limiting toxicity for all patients to increase monotonically with both dose and the number of administrations received.We assume a specific parametric hazard function for each administration and compute the total haz...
The prospect of exploiting mathematical and computational models to gain insight into the influence ...
Model-based optimal control has been used to synthesize chemotherapy treatment schedules. Constraint...
Chemotherapy is the most commonly employed method for systemic cancer treatment of\ud solid tumors a...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75664/1/j.1467-9876.2008.00660.x.pd
Most phase I clinical trials are designed to determine a maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) for one initia...
Traditionally, phase I clinical trial designs determine a maximum tolerated dose of an experimental ...
The main goal of a Phase I cancer clinical trial is to identify the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of ...
Recently, a Bayesian paradigm was constructed for Phase I trial designs that allows for the evaluat...
Recently, a Bayesian paradigm was constructed for Phase I trial designs that allows for the evaluat...
In traditional phase I and II clinical trial designs, toxicity and efficacy are often modelled as bi...
In traditional schedule or dose-schedule finding designs, patients are assumed to receive their assi...
The primary objective of phase I dose-finding trials is to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD...
Escalation with overdose control (EWOC) is a Bayesian adaptive phase I clinical trial design that pr...
The prospect of exploiting mathematical and computational models to gain insight into the influence ...
Model-based optimal control has been used to synthesize chemotherapy treatment schedules. Constraint...
Chemotherapy is the most commonly employed method for systemic cancer treatment of\ud solid tumors a...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75664/1/j.1467-9876.2008.00660.x.pd
Most phase I clinical trials are designed to determine a maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) for one initia...
Traditionally, phase I clinical trial designs determine a maximum tolerated dose of an experimental ...
The main goal of a Phase I cancer clinical trial is to identify the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of ...
Recently, a Bayesian paradigm was constructed for Phase I trial designs that allows for the evaluat...
Recently, a Bayesian paradigm was constructed for Phase I trial designs that allows for the evaluat...
In traditional phase I and II clinical trial designs, toxicity and efficacy are often modelled as bi...
In traditional schedule or dose-schedule finding designs, patients are assumed to receive their assi...
The primary objective of phase I dose-finding trials is to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD...
Escalation with overdose control (EWOC) is a Bayesian adaptive phase I clinical trial design that pr...
The prospect of exploiting mathematical and computational models to gain insight into the influence ...
Model-based optimal control has been used to synthesize chemotherapy treatment schedules. Constraint...
Chemotherapy is the most commonly employed method for systemic cancer treatment of\ud solid tumors a...