1 / 36

Considerations for Topical Microbicide Phase 2 and 3 Trial Design: A Regulatory Perspective

Considerations for Topical Microbicide Phase 2 and 3 Trial Design: A Regulatory Perspective. Teresa C. Wu, M.D., Ph.D. Division of Antiviral Drug Products Food and Drug Administration. Pipeline Regulatory Tools Development Nonclinical Phase 1 Phase 2 & 3. Phase 2 & 3 Design

agalia
Download Presentation

Considerations for Topical Microbicide Phase 2 and 3 Trial Design: A Regulatory Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Considerations for Topical Microbicide Phase 2 and 3 Trial Design: A Regulatory Perspective Teresa C. Wu, M.D., Ph.D. Division of Antiviral Drug Products Food and Drug Administration

  2. Pipeline Regulatory Tools Development Nonclinical Phase 1 Phase 2 & 3 Phase 2 & 3 Design Populations Endpoints Controls Level of Effectiveness Statistical Issues (duration,sample size etc): Dr. Bhore Outline

  3. Microbicides in Pipeline

  4. Mode of Action • Pathogen destruction by detergent-like chemicals • Maintenance of normal vaginal defenses by enhancing natural acidity • Blocking attachment of pathogens to target cells • Inhibition of HIV attachment, entry, reverse transcriptase • Unknown mechanisms

  5. Microbicides in Development • ~60 products in the pipeline • ~20 products either planned for or tested in early phases of human testing (Source: Alliance for Microbicide Development, March 2003) • 9 INDs filed • 4 products planned for phase 2 or 3 trials

  6. Regulatory Tools for Expediting Development

  7. Topical Microbicides Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act: section 506 (a) Eligible for Fast Track Drug Development Program • Ability to prevent a serious or life-threatening condition • Potential to address unmet medical needs

  8. Fast Track Drug Development Program • (Pre-IND consultation), end-of-phase 1, 2-meetings, pre-NDA meeting • Rolling submission of NDA • Priority review (6 months, vs. standard 10 months)

  9. Development of Microbicide Products

  10. Development Guidelines • The International Working Group on Microbicides (IWGM) Mauck C. et al. AIDS 2001, 15, 857-868 • Rockefeller Microbicide Initiative. Rockefeller Foundation, 2002:84 http://www.rockfound.org

  11. Nonclinical Studies • In vitro antiviral activity, cytotoxicity, mode of action, resistance and cross-resistance; impact on vaginal microflora, pathogens causing STIs. • Animal models for demonstrating microbicide antiviral activity have limited utility in selecting compound. • Nonclinical studies to assess safety, general and reproductive toxicity and pk. • Formulation identification, stability, purity and strength

  12. Phase 1 Trials • Total ~150-200 • Local and systemic safety • Selection of dose, formulation; assessment of product acceptability • Once, twice daily use for 7-14 days • HIV-negative women; sexually abstinent; then sexually active

  13. Phase 2 Trials • Conventionally, several hundred women • Expanded local & systemic safety, acceptability • Microbicide Activity:Proof-of-concept

  14. ‘Proof-of-Concept’ • No validated clinical correlates • In microbicide trials, ‘proof-of-concept’ for HIV prevention can only be measured in studies with very large numbers of participants (several thousand)

  15. Low HIV Incidence Rates In commercial sex workers (high-risk women) receiving condom counseling: • 3-5/100 person-years (India, Zaire,Rwanda) • 7/100 person-years (Cameroon)

  16. Male Condom Promotion & Counseling • ‘Standard of care’; services deemed ethically necessary for all participants. • High levels of condom use will likely further reduce HIV incidence rates.

  17. Monthly evaluations • Monthly pelvic exam & safety labs • Colposcopy for subset • Quarterly HIV serology • Quarterly evaluations • Quarterly HIV serology DSMB Review Phase 2 Phase 3 Months 0 3 5 12-24 Phase 2 Run-In Phase 3 Trial

  18. Populations • HIV-negative, sexually active, non-pregnant women at risk for HIV/STI in regions with high HIV prevalence • Such rates occur predominantly in developing countries, e.g. in Africa • Enrolling only frequent product users, e.g CSW, safety profile may not be representative of other groups of women • Adolescent (13-17 years), cultural and legal constraints

  19. Foreign Data 21CFR 314.106: As sole basis for marketing approval: ‘data are applicable to the U.S. population and U.S. medical practice’

  20. U.S. Population • Primary goal: safety profile and acceptability; exposure duration comparable to non-US participants • A subset of U.S. participants in phase 2 run-in phase 3 trial, or • U.S. data derived from contraceptive trials, or STIs prevention trials, e.g. chlamydia prevention in US women

  21. Endpoints • Primary: HIV seroconversion, Safety • Secondary: Incidence of STIs (chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, trichomoniasis) Incidence of other reproductive tract infections (BV, vulvovaginal candidiasis) - STIs are important co-factors. - The potential to increase susceptibility to one or more STIs should be assessed.

  22. 2 Parallel Control Groups • Placebo group • ‘No-treatment’ group (condom-only)

  23. Placebo • The choice of comparator when there is no approved microbicide • Providing blinding, maximizing unbiased estimate of efficacy and safety

  24. Placebo • Vehicle of the candidate microbicide Some components may have activity against HIV & bacteria,e.g. carbomer • Universal placebo: unrelated ‘inert’ chemical, gel-like substance; can be used for multiple microbicides trials, has been shown: -In vitro no activity against HIV, bacteria -Safe in limited nonclinical testing

  25. Placebo: Uncertainties • Placebo gel itself is a barrier which could have an unknown level of efficacy. • Placebo gel may have an unknown level of local toxicity when used in large numbers of women. Both uncertainties need to be addressed in the presence of a no-treatment control.

  26. Placebo - blinding - validate the interpretation of data from microbicide arm No-treatment - placebo may have activity/toxicity - validate the interpretation of data from placebo arm ‘No-treatment’ arm cannot be blinded. Differential dropout rates Differential risk behavior levels Potential gel sharing Cost increase 2 Parallel ControlsAdvantages Disadvantages

  27. Effect Size • Consistent condom use: decrease HIV risk by ~85% (NIH, 2001) • Measure incremental benefit offered over ‘imperfect’ (actual) use of condom alone. • In the context of ‘imperfect’ (actual) use of condom, most experts have considered an effect size of 30% to 50% to be acceptable for microbicides.

  28. Summary • Phase 2 run-in phase 3 trial design • Population enrolled should be generalizable. Data should be applicable to the U.S. population. • Endpoints: HIV incidence, safety, STIs incidences • 2 parallel controls: placebo, no-treatment • Effect size expected to be 30%-50%in the context of condom promotion

  29. Question 1: Design Please comment on the following: A. A phase 2 run-in phase 3 design B. A stand-alone phase 2 targeted at high-risk groups (e.g. CSW), followed by a phase 3 trial(s). Please comment on the feasibility. C. Other alternatives

  30. Monthly evaluations • Monthly pelvic exam & safety labs • Colposcopy for subset • Quarterly HIV serology • Quarterly evaluations • Quarterly HIV serology DSMB Review Phase 2 Phase 3 Months 0 3 5 12-24 Phase 2 Run-In Phase 3 Trial

  31. Question 2: Controls Please discuss and rank the following design options: A. 3-arm design (microbicide, placebo, and no-treatment) B. 2-arm design (microbicide, placebo) C. 2-arm design (microbicide, no -treatment)

  32. Placebo: - blinding - validate the interpretation of data from microbicide arm No-treatment: - placebo may have activity/toxicity - validate the interpretation of data from placebo arm ‘No-treatment’ arm cannot be blinded. Differential dropout rates Differential risk behavior levels Potential gel sharing Cost increase 2 Parallel ControlsAdvantages Disadvantages

  33. Question 3: ‘Win’/Success Definition If the committee is in favor of the 3-arm design, please comment on FDA’s definition of a ‘win’/success: The microbicide arm has to show a significantly better reduction in HIV seroconversion rate than both the placebo and no-treatment arms.

  34. Question 4: Follow-up Duration - How Long? • On-treatment A. 12 months for every participants B. 24 months for every participants C. Follow-up continues until the last participant enrolled completes 12 or 24 months. D. Less than 12 months. • Need an off-treatment follow-up? If yes, how long?

  35. Level of Evidence • For a single large well-controlled trial, does the Committee agree with FDA’s specifications that: - P < 0.001 (2-sided) : Convincing - 0.001 < P < 0.01: Possibly persuasive, if results are consistent across subgroups • What other supportive evidence does the Committee like to have?

More Related