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      Bayesian design and conduct of phase II single-arm clinical trials with binary outcomes: a tutorial.

      Contemporary Clinical Trials
      Bayes Theorem, Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic, methods, Humans, Models, Statistical, Sample Size

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          Abstract

          The aim of phase II single-arm clinical trials of a new drug is to determine whether it has sufficient promising activity to warrant its further development. For the last several years Bayesian statistical methods have been proposed and used. Bayesian approaches are ideal for earlier phase trials as they take into account information that accrues during a trial. Predictive probabilities are then updated and so become more accurate as the trial progresses. Suitable priors can act as pseudo samples, which make small sample clinical trials more informative. Thus patients have better chances to receive better treatments. The goal of this paper is to provide a tutorial for statisticians who use Bayesian methods for the first time or investigators who have some statistical background. In addition, real data from three clinical trials are presented as examples to illustrate how to conduct a Bayesian approach for phase II single-arm clinical trials with binary outcomes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          18201945
          10.1016/j.cct.2007.11.005

          Chemistry
          Bayes Theorem,Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic,methods,Humans,Models, Statistical,Sample Size

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