Multiple testing of treatment-effect-modifying biomarkers in a randomized clinical trial with a survival endpoint.

TitleMultiple testing of treatment-effect-modifying biomarkers in a randomized clinical trial with a survival endpoint.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsMichiels, Stefan, Richard F. Potthoff, and Stephen L. George
JournalStat Med
Volume30
Issue13
Pagination1502-18
Date Published2011 Jun 15
ISSN1097-0258
KeywordsAnthracyclines, Antineoplastic Agents, Biomarkers, Tumor, Breast Neoplasms, Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic, Endpoint Determination, Female, Humans, Models, Statistical, Statistics, Nonparametric, Survival Analysis
Abstract

The recent revolution in genomics and the advent of targeted therapies have increased interest in biomarker-defined subgroups of patients who respond to therapy or exhibit specific toxicities. Such biomarker-defined subgroups are also being investigated for non-targeted therapies (e.g. chemotherapy and statins). However, even when the targeting pathway has been identified, a broadly available test to identify the appropriate subgroup will rarely exist prior to the launch of the pivotal phase III trial. Our aim in this paper is to provide guidance for the analysis of a phase III clinical trial with a survival endpoint, in order to ascertain whether a therapy is more effective in the biomarker-positive patients as compared with biomarker-negative patients, when the trial is conducted on the entire population and when there are multiple candidate biomarkers. We studied treatment-by-biomarker interactions in a Weibull regression model. Different permutation procedures, using single-biomarker statistics and novel composite statistics, are proposed in order to control the family-wise error rate accounting for dependence structures among the biomarkers. A simulation study was performed to compare the operational characteristics of the permutation tests under different scenarios. The tests were applied to a phase III trial of adjuvant chemotherapy in early breast cancer, for which 10 biomarkers were measured in tumor samples from 798 patients. These permutation tests can be applied to retrospective biomarker studies and to prospective phase III trials of new drugs for which a few clues are known about the targeting pathway at the start of the trial.

DOI10.1002/sim.4022
Alternate JournalStat Med
Original PublicationMultiple testing of treatment-effect-modifying biomarkers in a randomized clinical trial with a survival endpoint.
PubMed ID21344471
PubMed Central IDPMC3098305
Grant ListU10 CA033601 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
N02CO41101 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
U10 CA033601-30 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
N02-CO-41101 / CO / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P01 CA142538 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
Project: