Abstract:
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The Food and Drug Administration Safety Innovations Act, passed in 2012, allows accelerated approvals for appropriate drugs and indications by evaluating the effects of drugs on surrogate markers. More recently, the FDA has established three additional pathways to speed the review process for emerging therapies. These changes prompted innovations in trial design and facilitated tissue agnostic drug development strategies. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have yielded promising therapies for patients experiencing refractory cancers. Trials evaluating ICIs made extensive use of phase Ib, enrolling hundreds and even more than one thousand patients into dose expansion cohorts following dose-escalation spanning multiple tumor types. This represents a departure from conventional drug development strategies. In 2021 two drugs, Atezolizumab and Durvalumab, were voluntarily withdrawn from accelerated approvals for PD-L1 inhibition in advanced or metastatic bladder cancer. This presentation considers statistical challenges posed by this paradigm wherein novel treatment targets may not be well characterized for standard of care therapies.
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