Sample size, power calculations, and their implications for the cost of thorough studies of drug induced QT interval prolongation

被引:56
|
作者
Malik, M [1 ]
Hnatkova, K [1 ]
Batchvarov, V [1 ]
Gang, Y [1 ]
Smetana, P [1 ]
Camm, AJ [1 ]
机构
[1] St George Hosp, Sch Med, Dept Cardiac & Vasc Sci, Sect Noninvas Electrophysiol, London SW17 0RE, England
来源
关键词
drugsafety; electrocardiogram; QT interval prolongation; clinical studies; dataquality; sample size; cost;
D O I
10.1111/j.1540-8159.2004.00701.x
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Regulatory authorities require new drugs to be investigated using a so-called "thorough QT/QTc study" to identify compounds with a potential of influencing cardiac repolarization in man. Presently drafted regulatory consensus requires these studies to be powered for the statistical detection of QTc interval changes as small as 5 ms. Since this translates into a noticeable drug development burden, strategies need to be identified allowing the size and thus the cost of thorough QT/QTc studies to be minimized. This study investigated the influence of QT and RR interval data quality and the precision of heart rate correction on the sample sizes of thorough QT/QTc studies. In 57 healthy subjects (26 women, age range 19-42 years), a total of 4,195 drug-free digital electrocardiograms (ECG) were obtained (65-84 ECGs per subject). All ECG parameters were measured manually using the most accurate approach with reconciliation of measurement differences between different cardiologists and aligning the measurements of corresponding ECG patterns. From the data derived in this measurement process, seven different levels of QT/RR data quality were obtained, ranging from the simplest approach of measuring 3 beats in one ECG lead to the most exact approach. Each of these QT/RR data-sets was processed with eight different heart rate corrections ranging from Bazett and Fridericia corrections to the individual QT/RR regression modelling with optimization of QT/RR curvature. For each combination of data quality and heart rate correction, standard deviation of individual mean QTc values and mean of individual standard deviations of QTc values were calculated and used to derive the size of thorough QT/QTc studies with an 80% power to detect 5 ms QTc changes at the significance level of 0.05. Irrespective of data quality and heart rote corrections, the necessary sample sizes of studies based on between-subject comparisons (e.g., parallel studies) are very substantial requiring >140 subjects per group. However, the required study size may be substantially reduced in investigations based on within-subject comparisons (e.g., crossover studies or studies of several parallel groups each crossing over an active treatment with placebo). While simple measurement approaches with ad-hoc heart rote correction still lead to requirements of >150 subjects, the combination of best data quality with most accurate individualized heart rate correction decreases the variability of QTc measurements in each individual very substantially. In the data of this study, the average of standard deviations of QTc values calculated separately in each individual was only 5.2 ms. Such a variability in QTc data translates to only 18 subjects per study group (e.g., the size of a complete one-group crossover study) to detect 5 ms QTc change with on 80% power. Cost calculations show that by involving the most stringent ECG handling and measurement, the cost of a thorough QT/QTc study maybe reduced to approximately 25%-30% of the cost imposed by the simple ECG reading (e.g., three complexes in one lead only).
引用
收藏
页码:1659 / 1669
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Sample size calculations in thorough QT studies
    Zhang, Lu
    Dmitrienko, Alex
    Luta, George
    JOURNAL OF BIOPHARMACEUTICAL STATISTICS, 2008, 18 (03) : 468 - 482
  • [2] Drug-induced QT interval prolongation: does ethnicity of the thorough QT study population matter?
    Shah, Rashmi R.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2013, 75 (02) : 347 - 358
  • [3] Perianesthesia Implications and Considerations for Drug-Induced QT Interval Prolongation
    Aroke, Edwin N.
    Nkemazeh, Rolland Z.
    JOURNAL OF PERIANESTHESIA NURSING, 2020, 35 (02) : 104 - 111
  • [4] DRUG-INDUCED QT INTERVAL PROLONGATION
    Zhamba, A. O.
    WORLD OF MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2015, 51 (03): : 125 - 129
  • [5] Drug-induced prolongation of the QT interval
    Cruciani, RA
    Portenoy, RK
    Homel, P
    NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2004, 350 (25): : 2619 - 2620
  • [6] Drug-induced QT interval prolongation
    Thomas, SHL
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1996, 42 (03) : 399 - 399
  • [7] Mechanisms of Drug Induced QT Interval Prolongation
    Luis Ponte, Marcelo
    Alberto Keller, Guillermo
    Di Girolamo, Guillermo
    CURRENT DRUG SAFETY, 2010, 5 (01) : 44 - 53
  • [8] Evaluation of drug-induced QT interval prolongation - Implications for drug approval and labelling
    Malik, M
    Camm, AJ
    DRUG SAFETY, 2001, 24 (05) : 323 - 351
  • [9] Sex differences in QT interval variability and implication on sample size of thorough QT study
    Zhang, Lu
    Smith, Brian P.
    DRUG INFORMATION JOURNAL, 2007, 41 (05): : 619 - 627
  • [10] Sex Differences in QT Interval Variability and Implication on Sample Size of Thorough QT Study
    Lu Zhang
    Brian P. Smith
    Drug information journal : DIJ / Drug Information Association, 2007, 41 : 619 - 627