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Activity Number: 441 - Bayesian (and Other) Clinical Trials Designs
Type: Contributed
Date/Time: Thursday, August 12, 2021 : 4:00 PM to 5:50 PM
Sponsor: Biopharmaceutical Section
Abstract #318181
Title: Replicate Testing Strategies in Vaccine Efficacy Trials Can Prevent No-Go Decisions for Beneficial Vaccines
Author(s): Radha A Railkar* and Jeffrey Sachs and Daniel Rosenbloom
Companies: Biostatistics and Research Decision Sciences, Merck & Co., Inc. and Merck & Co. and Merck & Co.
Keywords: vaccine efficacy; diagnostic assays; disease incidence; case counting
Abstract:

In vaccine efficacy trials, diagnostic assays are typically used to define disease cases. Inaccurate counting of disease cases leads to systematic under-estimation or “dilution” of vaccine efficacy, which can result in unwarranted no-go decisions in vaccine development. This problem is exacerbated in trials of vaccines for self-limiting infections, in which frequent sampling may be needed to ensure that a case is detected before pathogen biomarkers decay. We propose several replicate testing strategies to combat this problem, considering the additional challenge of uncertainty in both disease incidence and diagnostic assay specificity/sensitivity. A strategy that counts an infection case only if a majority of replicate assays return a positive result can dramatically reduce efficacy dilution. We also find that a cost-effective variant of this strategy, using confirmatory assays only if an initial assay is positive, yields a comparable benefit. The properties of these replicate testing strategies are compared over a range of assay and trial parameters, and their ability to reduce efficacy dilution is demonstrated.


Authors who are presenting talks have a * after their name.

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