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. 2022 May 27;28:100935. doi: 10.1016/j.conctc.2022.100935

Table 1.

Comparison of 3 Phase III trial design options with estimated duration.

Option Duration
Pros and cons
If stopped
If continued
FPI ∼ LPI (Enrollment duration) FPI ∼ Trial end FPI ∼ LPI (Enrollment duration) FPI ∼ NDA Pros Cons
Option 1: Fixed design with a total sample size of 225 patients for 3 arms 3 months 9 months 18 months 35 months ●Statistical power: high.
Ideal statistical power (>90%) for a fixed design trial based on an assumed SD of 10.
●Trial implementation/Regulatory risk: low.
●Enrollment risk: high.
225 patients considered to be the maximum feasible sample size, imposing the highest risk of not achieving the enrollment target.
●Development time: unfavorable.
Enrollment period and trial duration almost one year longer than our desired.
Option 2: Fixed design with a total sample size of 150 patients for 3 arms 3 months 9 months 11 months 26 months ●Enrollment risk: low.
●Development time: favorable.
The shortest duration, fitting desired development time frame.
●Trial implementation/Regulatory risk: low.
●Statistical power: low.
Statistical power lower than 80% based on an assumed SD of 10, leading to the highest risk in trial success.
Option 3: Adaptive statistical design with a minimum sample size of 150 patients and a maximum sample size of 225 patients for three arms. 3 months 9 months 11–18 months 26–35 months ●Statistical power: varies between those for Options 1 and 2.
Avoids drawbacks of Options 1 and 2 with an opportunity to make mid-trial adjustments to accommodate uncertainty in the SD up to 10.
●Enrollment risk: varies between those for Options 1 and 2.
●Development time: varies between those for Options 1 and 2.
●Trial implementation/Regulatory risk: high. More complex design compared to Options 1 and 2; lack of experience with implementing an adaptive design trial. Requires intensive upfront planning and special measures to prevent operational bias.

FPI: First patient in; LPI: last patient in; NDA: new drug application.

Durations are rough estimates at the planning stage.