Single-Arm Phase II Trials of Combination Therapies: A Review of the CTEP Experience 2008–2017

Author:

Foster Jared C1ORCID,Freidlin Boris1,Kunos Charles A2,Korn Edward L1

Affiliation:

1. Biometric Research Program, Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD

2. Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD

Abstract

AbstractDesigning and interpreting single-arm phase II trials of combinations of agents is challenging because it can be difficult, based on historical data, to identify levels of activity for which the combination would be worth pursuing. We identified Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program single-arm combination trials that were activated in 2008–2017 and tabulated their design characteristics and results. Positive trials were evaluated as to whether they provided credible evidence that the combination was better than its constituents. A total of 125 trials were identified, and 120 trials had results available. Twelve had designs where eligible patients were required to be resistant or refractory to all but one element of the combination. Only 17.8% of the 45 positive trials were deemed to provide credible evidence that the combination was better than its constituents. Of the 10 positive trials with observed rates 10 percentage points higher than their upper (alternative hypothesis) targets, only five were deemed to provide such credible evidence. Many trials were definitively negative, with observed clinical activity at or below their lower (null hypothesis) targets. Ideally, use of single-arm combination trials should be restricted to settings where each agent is known to have minimal monotherapy activity (and a randomized trial is infeasible). In these settings, an observed signal is attributable to synergy and thus could be used to decide whether the combination is worth pursuing. In other settings, credible evidence can still be obtained if the observed activity is much higher than expected, but experience suggests that this is a rare occurrence.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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