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. 2021 Jun 26;23(4):381–394. doi: 10.1007/s40272-021-00455-1

Table 2.

Criteria to enable evaluation of the translational relevance of preclinical models of pediatric cancer (developed by St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital) [51]

Criteria Description
Randomization Before the preclinical study begins, the randomization schedule should be designed by biostatisticians and the interim analysis and censure rules specified
Double-blind study design Individuals administering treatment and monitoring responses should have no knowledge of the treatment groups
Pharmacokinetics The murine equivalent dose should be determined based on the recommended pediatric phase 2 dose (RPP2D). In many cases, the RPP2D is not known, so the adult recommended phase 2 dose is used instead
Pharmacodynamics Pharmacodynamic analysis is required to confirm that the drug enters tumor cells and affects the pathway of interest
Clinically relevant drug dose The drug dose used in the preclinical model should correspond to the plasma exposure in pediatric patients (if known)
Clinically relevant drug combination In addition to single-agent studies, drug combinations should be considered for preclinical studies if clinically relevant
Clinically relevant drug schedule The duration of each course of therapy in the preclinical study should be the same as that used in clinical trials
Monitoring toxicity relevant to pediatric patients The hematological and/or organ toxicity expected for a given treatment should be carefully monitored and any relationship between drug exposure and toxicity should be characterized
Tumor validation Preclinical tumor model should be carefully characterized and, where possible, should match patient tumors in terms of histology, genomic features, and tumor location
Efficacy measurements relevant to patient outcome The definitions of progressive disease, stable disease, partial response, and complete response should be specified before the preclinical study begins. As a guide, for a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized efficacy study, typically 10–20 mice per group are needed to adequately power the study