Focus oncology development on the patient, manage trial complexity, and increase predictability and speed.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is highlighting efforts to promote innovative trial design that will accelerate the typically time-consuming and expensive process of developing and testing drugs for cancer patients. New trial designs, often referred to as seamless clinical trials, merge the traditional, sequential Phase I, II and III path into fewer protocols that expand or shift based on interim data checks. The idea is to more rapidly move oncology treatments through the regulatory process to market. One large continuous trial can shave off years from the development program and millions of dollars in cost, while also reducing the need to enroll scores of patients. Moreover, FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb has emphasized these new trial designs are also “highly consistent with the goals of the 21st Century Cures Act and the FDA Reauthorization Act.”
In a seamless trial, oncology sponsors can progress from a first-in-human (FIH), single-arm trial and add expansion cohorts if they detect strong responses during the early stages of development, even going straight to registration if the efficacy signal is strong enough. A notable example is Merck’s FIH trial of Keytruda® (pembrolizumab), an immune checkpoint inhibitor targeting programmed cell death receptor-1 (PD-1). The study began in 2011 as a FIH dose-finding Phase I trial focused on safety and tolerability, and investigators were ultimately able to add 20 more cohorts to the study (bringing the grand total of enrolled patients to above 1,200) when early results showed positive responses in patients with metastatic melanoma or non-small cell lung cancer*. That opened the trial to further evaluation of efficacy, alternative dosing, and a potential predictive biomarker. In 2014, the FDA approved Keytruda as the first anti-PD-1 therapy, based on results from a single-arm cohort of 173 patients with melanoma. By Q4 2014, data collected from this seamless trial with expansion cohorts in NSCLC were used to obtain breakthrough therapy designation and support the accelerated approval of Keytruda in NSCLC in 2015.
Seamless clinical trials are becoming increasingly popular with oncology sponsors. In 2016, the FDA received more than 40 active commercial investigational new drug (IND) applications for large FIH oncology trials using such design strategies**. This may come as no surprise in light of statistics illustrating how seamless design may increase the likelihood of approval - 16 percent of investigational agents in seamless trials received accelerated approval, a markedly higher number than the 5 percent of oncology therapies that ultimately receive FDA approval. Although any conclusion from these data should be tempered by the potential selection bias for therapies that are developed using adaptive or seamless trials, as these therapies often receive breakthrough designation status and display better efficacy than available therapies.
In a white paper that dives into alternate trial routes to faster approval, we break down key aspects oncology sponsors must consider when pursuing a seamless trial design. Here is a brief overview of some of these aspects:
For more information on considerations relevant to seamless trial design, please read our whitepaper, “Embracing Innovative Designs in Early Phase Oncology Studies: A Different Route to Faster Approvals.”
Focus oncology development on the patient, manage trial complexity, and increase predictability and speed.
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