Most phase I clinical trials are designed to determine a maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) for one initial administration or treatment course of a cytotoxic experimental agent. Toxicity usually is defined as the indicator of whether one or more particular adverse events occur within a short time period from the start of therapy. However, physicians often administer an agent to the patient repeatedly and monitor long-term toxicity due to cumulative effects. We propose a new method for such settings. It is based on the time to toxicity rather than a binary outcome, and the goal is to determine a maximum-tolerated schedule (MTS) rather than a conventional MTD. The model and method account for a patient's entire sequence of administrations, with the...
International audiencePhase I dose-finding trials in oncology seek to find the maximum tolerated dos...
International audienceThis article addresses the concern regarding late-onset dose-limiting toxiciti...
International audienceThis article addresses the concern regarding late-onset dose-limiting toxiciti...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
Traditionally, phase I clinical trial designs determine a maximum tolerated dose of an experimental ...
Summary. We propose a phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of...
Escalation with overdose control (EWOC) is a Bayesian adaptive phase I clinical trial design that pr...
This article proposes a novel criterion for the allocation of patients in phase I dose-escalation cl...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
Phase I trials are the cornerstone of cancer drug development, and the goal of phase I dose-finding ...
Conventional dose-finding methods in oncology are mainly developed for cytotoxic agents with the aim...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75664/1/j.1467-9876.2008.00660.x.pd
Phase I-II cancer clinical trial designs are intended to accelerate drug development. In cases where...
Background: A widely used phase I design in clinical trials of chemotherapy for cancer and for AIDS ...
evaluating efficacy and toxicity with delayed outcomes Joseph S Koopmeinersa,c and Jaime Modianob,c ...
International audiencePhase I dose-finding trials in oncology seek to find the maximum tolerated dos...
International audienceThis article addresses the concern regarding late-onset dose-limiting toxiciti...
International audienceThis article addresses the concern regarding late-onset dose-limiting toxiciti...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
Traditionally, phase I clinical trial designs determine a maximum tolerated dose of an experimental ...
Summary. We propose a phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of...
Escalation with overdose control (EWOC) is a Bayesian adaptive phase I clinical trial design that pr...
This article proposes a novel criterion for the allocation of patients in phase I dose-escalation cl...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
Phase I trials are the cornerstone of cancer drug development, and the goal of phase I dose-finding ...
Conventional dose-finding methods in oncology are mainly developed for cytotoxic agents with the aim...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75664/1/j.1467-9876.2008.00660.x.pd
Phase I-II cancer clinical trial designs are intended to accelerate drug development. In cases where...
Background: A widely used phase I design in clinical trials of chemotherapy for cancer and for AIDS ...
evaluating efficacy and toxicity with delayed outcomes Joseph S Koopmeinersa,c and Jaime Modianob,c ...
International audiencePhase I dose-finding trials in oncology seek to find the maximum tolerated dos...
International audienceThis article addresses the concern regarding late-onset dose-limiting toxiciti...
International audienceThis article addresses the concern regarding late-onset dose-limiting toxiciti...