Background
Toxicity grades underlie the definition of a dose-limiting toxicity but in
the majority of phase I designs, the information contained in the individual grades
is not used. Some authors have argued that it may be more appropriate to consider a
polytomous rather than dichotomous response.
Purpose
We investigate whether the added information on individual grades can
improve the operating characteristics of the continual reassessment method.
Methods
We compare the original continual reassessment method design for a binary
response with two stage continual reassessment method designs which make different
use of lower grade toxicity information via simulations.
Specifically, we study a two-stage design that utilizes lower grade toxicities in the
first stage only, during the initial non-model-based escalation, and two-stage
designs where lower grades are used throughout the trial via
explicit models. We postulate a model relating the rates of lower grade toxicities to
the rate of dose-limiting toxicity, or assume the relative rates of low-to-high grade
toxicities is unknown. The designs were compared in terms of accuracy, patient
allocation, and precision.
Results
Significant gains can be achieved when using grades in the first stage of a
two-stage design. Otherwise, only modest improvements are seen when the information
on grades is exploited via the use of explicit models, where the
parameters are known precisely. Continual reassessment method with some use of grade
information, increases the number of patients treated at the maximum tolerated dose
by approximately 5%. The additional information from lower grades can lead to a small
increase in the precision of our estimate of the maximum tolerated dose.
Limitations
Our comparisons are not exhaustive and it would be worth studying other
models and situations.
Conclusions
Although the gains in performance were not as great as we had hoped, we
observed no cases where the performance of continual reassessment method was poorer.
Our recommendation is that investigators might consider using graded toxicities at
the design stage.