A simple stopping rule for declaring treatment ineffectiveness in clinical trials.

We consider the problem of stopping a clinical trial before its scheduled termination due to the apparent ineffectiveness of the experimental therapy, as compared with a control. We propose a simple-to-implement, intuitive decision rule based on the unadjusted attained significance levels from any appropriate statistical test. The proposed procedure may be used at any time during the study as an aid to help determine whether the study of an experimental treatment should be terminated early with the conclusion of treatment ineffectiveness. Much of the power of the usual fixed-sample test is retained while maintaining the nominal test size.

[1]  S. Pocock Group sequential methods in the design and analysis of clinical trials , 1977 .

[2]  S. Snapinn,et al.  Monitoring clinical trials with a conditional probability stopping rule. , 1992, Statistics in medicine.

[3]  David L. DeMets,et al.  Group sequential methods for clinical trials with a one-sided hypothesis , 1980 .

[4]  J. Castellana,et al.  A clinical trial with an interim analysis. , 1986, Statistics in medicine.

[5]  D L DeMets,et al.  An aid to data monitoring in long-term clinical trials. , 1982, Controlled clinical trials.

[6]  David L. DeMets,et al.  Asymmetric group sequential boundaries for monitoring clinical trials , 1982 .

[7]  J. Lubsen,et al.  Early termination of clinical trials with prolonged observation of individual patients: a case study. , 1987, Statistics in medicine.

[8]  A. Lawrence Gould,et al.  Group sequential methods for clinical trials allowing early acceptance of Ho and incorporating costs , 1982 .

[9]  Margaret S. Pepe,et al.  Two-stage experimental designs : early stopping with a negative result , 1992 .

[10]  D. Spiegelhalter,et al.  Monitoring clinical trials: conditional or predictive power? , 1986, Controlled clinical trials.

[11]  Truncated group sequential test for clinical trials , 1986 .

[12]  Sung C. Choi,et al.  Early decision in clinical trials when the treatment differences are small. Experience of a controlled trial in head trauma. , 1985, Controlled clinical trials.

[13]  T R Fleming,et al.  Symmetric group sequential test designs. , 1989, Biometrics.

[14]  J Whitehead,et al.  Group sequential clinical trials with triangular continuation regions. , 1983, Biometrics.

[15]  P. O'Brien,et al.  A multiple testing procedure for clinical trials. , 1979, Biometrics.

[16]  W W Hauck,et al.  A proposal for interpreting and reporting negative studies. , 1986, Statistics in medicine.

[17]  Chih-Hsiang Ho Stopping Rules for Clinical Trials Implicitly Incorporating Safety Information , 1991 .