Traditionally, phase I clinical trial designs determine a maximum tolerated dose of an experimental cytotoxic agent based on a fixed schedule, usually one course consisting of multiple administrations, while varying the dose per administration between patients. However, in actual medical practice patients often receive several courses of treatment, and some patients may receive one or more dose reductions due to low-grade (non-dose limiting) toxicity in previous courses. As a result, the overall risk of toxicity for each patient is a function of both the schedule and the dose used at each adminstration. We propose a new paradigm for Phase I clinical trials that allows both the dose per administration and the schedule to vary, making trea...
This dissertation develops new methods for unaddressed issues in the design of Bayesian adaptive Pha...
This dissertation develops new methods for unaddressed issues in the design of Bayesian adaptive Pha...
The product of independent beta probabilities escalation design for dual agent phase I dose escalati...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
In traditional schedule or dose-schedule finding designs, patients are assumed to receive their assi...
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...
Due to the small sample sizes in early-phase clinical trials, the toxicity and efficacy profiles of ...
Most phase I clinical trials are designed to determine a maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) for one initia...
Phase I-II cancer clinical trial designs are intended to accelerate drug development. In cases where...
Phase I trials are the cornerstone of cancer drug development, and the goal of phase I dose-finding ...
My dissertation focuses mainly on Bayesian adaptive designs for phase I and phase II clinical trials...
Early phase, or phase I and phase II, trials are the first step in testing new medicines that have b...
We propose a robust two-stage design to identify the optimal biological dose for phase I/II clinical...
International audienceNovel molecularly targeted agents (MTAs) have emerged as valuable alternatives...
This dissertation develops new methods for unaddressed issues in the design of Bayesian adaptive Pha...
This dissertation develops new methods for unaddressed issues in the design of Bayesian adaptive Pha...
The product of independent beta probabilities escalation design for dual agent phase I dose escalati...
We propose a Phase I clinical trial design that seeks to determine the cumulative safety of a series...
In traditional schedule or dose-schedule finding designs, patients are assumed to receive their assi...
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...
Due to the small sample sizes in early-phase clinical trials, the toxicity and efficacy profiles of ...
Most phase I clinical trials are designed to determine a maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) for one initia...
Phase I-II cancer clinical trial designs are intended to accelerate drug development. In cases where...
Phase I trials are the cornerstone of cancer drug development, and the goal of phase I dose-finding ...
My dissertation focuses mainly on Bayesian adaptive designs for phase I and phase II clinical trials...
Early phase, or phase I and phase II, trials are the first step in testing new medicines that have b...
We propose a robust two-stage design to identify the optimal biological dose for phase I/II clinical...
International audienceNovel molecularly targeted agents (MTAs) have emerged as valuable alternatives...
This dissertation develops new methods for unaddressed issues in the design of Bayesian adaptive Pha...
This dissertation develops new methods for unaddressed issues in the design of Bayesian adaptive Pha...
The product of independent beta probabilities escalation design for dual agent phase I dose escalati...