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Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement: Drs. Stella Machado & George Rochester

Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Page 1: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study

2005 FDA/Industry Workshop

Washington DC

September 16, 2005

Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D.

CDER/FDA*Acknowledgement: Drs. Stella Machado & George Rochester

Page 2: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Disclaimer

• This presentation represents the opinions of the author, and not necessarily those of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Page 3: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Outline

I. Thorough QT/QTc Study

- Introduction

II. Design Considerations

III. Statistical Test for a Negative ‘Thorough QT/QTc Study’

- Statistical Hypothesis & Test

- Intersection-Union Tests

IV.False Positive and False Negative Probabilities

V. Assay Sensitivity

VI.Summary

Page 4: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Thorough QT/QTc Study

Page 5: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Introduction

• QT interval represents the time between start of ventricular depolarization and end of ventricular repolarization (QT).

• QTc is the QT-interval corrected for heart rates

Page 6: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Introduction (2)

• QT/QTc prolongation may cause ventricular arrhythmias including ventricular fibrillation and Torsade de Pointes, which can be fatal even though the degree of this association is not known

• Current ICH E 14 Guidance requests all sponsors submitting new drug applications to conduct a thorough QT/QTc study

– Generally conducted in early clinical development after some knowledge of the pharmacokinetics of the drug

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Introduction (3)

• ICH E14 Guidance (Step 4, Adopted May 2005)

“The ‘thorough QT/QTc study’ is intended to determine whether the drug has a threshold pharmacologic effect on cardiac repolarization, as detected by QT/QTc prolongation.”

“The study is typically carried out in healthy volunteers (as opposed to individuals at increased risk of arrhythmias) and is used to determine whether or not the effect of a drug on the QT/QTc interval in target patient populations should be studied intensively during later stages of drug development.”

Page 8: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Negative ‘Thorough QT/QTc Study’

• ICH E14 Guidance (Step 4, Adopted May 2005)

“…a negative ‘thorough QT/QTc study’ is one in which the upper bound of the 95% one-sided confidence interval for the largest time-matched mean effect of the drug on the QTc interval excludes 10 ms.”

Page 9: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Non-negative ‘Thorough QT/QTc Study’

• If a ‘thorough QT/QTc study’ is not negative, i.e., if at least one upper bound of the one-sided 95% confidence interval of the time-matched difference exceeds the threshold of 10 ms, the study is termed “Non-negative”.

Page 10: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Implications of Results from the ‘Thorough QT/QTc Study’

ICH E 14:

• IF the ‘thorough QT/QTc study’ is negative – “the collection of baseline and periodic on-therapy ECGs in accordance with the current investigational practices in each therapeutic field is almost always sufficient evaluation during subsequent stages of drug development.”

• IF ‘thorough QT/QTc study’ is non-negative – “additional evaluation in subsequent clinical studies should be performed.” Hence, expanded ECG safety evaluation during later stages of drug development are needed.

Page 11: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Design Considerations

Page 12: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Design Considerations

• To better control variability and potential bias

– Randomized, double blinded, placebo and active controlled, single or multiple doses of the drug, crossover or parallel study

– Healthy volunteers, it is better to have similar number of males and females in the study (randomization stratified by gender)

– Crossover design recommended if possible

– For a crossover study, baseline at each period is recommended

Page 13: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Design Considerations (2)

• QT data are highly variable, so control of all sources of variability is critical

• Replicated QT measurements at each time-point are recommended. Typically ≥3 replicates. The mean of these replicates is used.

• The baseline QT measurements should be taken as close to the treatment date as possible; typically either– At matching time-points on the day prior to drug treatment; or– At time 0 before dosing, the same day of treatment

• QT interval data are adjusted for heart rate (HR) to obtain QTc values which are correlated with HR as little as possible.– Fridericia’s corrected values– Individual corrected values– Bazett’s corrected values

Page 14: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Crossover Design

• A crossover QT/QTc study is recommended as opposed to a parallel study if possible since

– It requires smaller number of subjects

– The precision of estimated treatment differences is greater since subjects act as their own control

• Methods and practice applicable in any cross-over trial should be applied in a crossover QT/QTc trial.

• Some issues encountered in a crossover-trial need to be considered here; including period effect and carry-over or residual effect.

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Crossover Design (2)

• Suppose a 4 TRT arm study

– DH: drug, high dose

– DL: drug, low dose

– P: placebo

– PC: positive control

• Some designs we have seen:

(Example 1)

• Problems? – Can’t distinguish the period effect from the treatment effect.

Period 1 Period 2 Period 3 Period 4

PC P DL DH

Page 16: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Crossover Design (3)

Example 2

Problems? – Period effect is confounded with the treatments. This

concern only pertains to PC though.

Group Period 1 Period 2 Period 3 Period 4

A DL DH P PC

B DL P DH PC

C P DL DH PC

D P DH DL PC

E DH DL P PC

F DH P DL PC

Page 17: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Crossover Design (Continued)

• One recommended design for a 4 treatment study (a Williams Square)

Group  Period 1 Period 2 Period 3 Period 4

A DL DH P PC

B DH PC DL P

C P DL PC DH

D PC P DH DL

Page 18: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Parallel

Parallel group studies may have to be used under certain circumstances:

• For drugs with long elimination half-lives • For drugs whose carryover effects are

prominent

Page 19: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Sample Size Required for a Crossover Design and a Parallel Design

Notations:• N1 - # of subjects in a crossover study • N2 - # of subjects per arm in a parallel study - observed difference in treatment (adjusted for baseline) for an individual• SD() = 1 for a crossover;

2 for a parallel D – SD for the drug P – SD for placebo 12 – Correlation coefficient between the drug and placebo for the same

individual (>0)

Relation between N1 and N2

• In order to make Var(mean of ) the same for both crossover and parallel studies, we have N2 = (2/ 1)2N1

• Relation between 1 and 2: 22 = 1

2 + 212DP

• For a 4 arm trial, sample needed for a parallel study can be at least 4 times more than a crossover study

Page 20: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Statistical Test for a Negative ‘Thorough QT/QTc Study’

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Calculating Time-matched Mean Difference

• How to estimate the time-matched population mean effect?

Qit: (Baseline adjusted) QT/QTc value for the ith subject at time t after receiving the drug

Pit: (Baseline adjusted) QT/QTc value for the ith subject at time t after receiving placebo

Time-matched mean difference at time t (suppose equal sample size N in both the drug and placebo groups)

Qit/N - Pit/N = (For a crossover)

N is the number of subjects i

itit N/)PQ(

Page 22: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Statistical Hypotheses

• Hypotheses:

H0: t(D) - t(P) ≥ ms for at least one t

H1: t(D) - t(P) < ms for all t

is the non-inferiority margin (10 ms in the guidance)

t(D) and t(P) are the population means for the drug and placebo at time t, t=1,2,…,K. K is the total number of time points where QT has been measured.

• Claim a negative QT/QTc study if H0 is rejected

• Use = 0.05

Page 23: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Statistical Test

• Let be the observed average time-matched drug placebo difference after baseline adjusted at time t. Let Tt be the test statistic at time t, then

Tt = ( - )/SD( )

Reject H0 if Tt < -t, N-1 for all t, where t, N-1 is the upper tail

level critical value for the t distribution with N-1 df, and N is the

sample size.

The above procedure is to test if all one sided 95% CI upper

bounds are < ms at each time point.

t

t

t

Page 24: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Intersection-Union Tests

• Suppose Rt is the rejection region of a level- test for H0t:

t(D) - t(P) ≥ ms, t=1,2,…,K, then the Intersection-

Union Test with rejection region R= is still a level-

test for H0

• No need for multiplicity adjustment to test for a negative

thorough QT/QTc study

K1t tR

Page 25: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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False Positive & False Negative Probabilities

Page 26: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Definitions

• Type I error: False Negative Probability (FNP)

FNP = P(Tt < - t, N-1 for all t | at least one true difference ≥ )

By IUT, FNP can be controlled under (0.05) level

• Type II error: False Positive Probability (FPP)

FPP = P(Tt ≥ - t, N-1 for at least one t | true difference < 5 ms at each time point)

Why 5 ms chosen: “… drugs that prolong the mean QT/QTc interval by around 5 ms or less do not appear to cause TdP” – ICH E14

Page 27: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Simulation Study

• Purpose: to evaluate the FNP and FPP

• Assumptions:

= 8 ms, 10 ms

– SD () = 8.5 ms based on a crossover study in house

– # of times evaluated K = 5 and 15

– Multi-normal assumption: NK(, )

= 0.1 and 0.9

– Sample size 65

– 10000 simulations per scenario

1

1

1

2T1T

2T

1T

2

Page 28: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Results: False Negative ProbabilityTable 1

K=5 K=15

  (0,0,8,0,0) (0,0,8,8,0) (0-0,8,0-0) (0-0,8,8,0-0)

 8 0.1 0.044 0.005 0.051 0.004

 8 0.9 0.041 0.036 0.047 0.028

  (0,0,10,0,0) (0,0,10,10,0) (0-0,10,0-0) (0-0,10,10,0-0)

 10 0.1 0.037 0.002 0.051 0.002

 10 0.9 0.052 0.036 0.046 0.031

Page 29: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Results: Power (1-FPP) Curves (=(2,3,4,4,3)’, =0.1)

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

6 8 10 12 14

Theta=8, N=30 Theta=8, N=60 Theta=8, N=90 Theta=8, N=200

Theta=10, N=30 Theta=10, N=60 Theta=10, N=90 Theta=10, N=200

Page 30: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Results: Power (1-FPP) Curves (=(2,3,4,4,3)’, =0.9)

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Theta=8, N=30 Theta=8, N=60 Theta=8, N=90 Theta=8, N=200

Theta=10, N=30 Theta=10, N=60 Theta=10, N=90 Theta=10, N=200

Page 31: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Conclusions

This simulation example shows:

• FNP is well controlled under the level

• FPP (or 1 - Power) is driven by

– The true mean difference of the drug and placebo

– The Non-inferiority margin

– Variability of the data

– Sample size

Page 32: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Is it true the greater the number of time points, the higher the type II error? (N=65)

Table 2

Scenario , K Assumed True Mean Difference r=0.1 r=0.9

a 8, 5 (3,4,4.9,4,1) 0.134 0.109

b  8, 15 (0,0,0,1,1,3,4,4.9,4,1,1,1,0,0,0) 0.132 0.103

c  8, 5 (1,1,1,4.9,1) 0.101 0.106

d 8, 15 (0,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,4.9,1,1,1,0,0,0) 0.112 0.097

e 10, 5 (3,4,4.9,4,1) 0.001 0.001

f  10,15 (0,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,4.9,1,1,1,0,0,0) 0.001 0.001

g 10, 5 (1,1,1,4.9,1) 0.001 0.001

 h 10, 15 (0,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,4.9,1,1,1,0,0,0) 0.001 0.001

Page 33: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Findings

Focus on top half of table 2.

• As long as the time points chosen can capture the relatively big QT/QTc effect, the number of time points does not change FPP (Scenarios (a) vs. (b), (c) vs. (d))

• FPP can increase with the number of time points (Scenario (c) vs. (b))

• FPP can decrease with the number of time points (Scenario (a) vs. (d)).

• Conclusion: It is not always true that the FPP is an increasing function of the time points when QT/QTc are evaluated

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Assay Sensitivity

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Assay Sensitivity

ICH E14:“The positive control should have an effect on the mean

QT/QTc interval of about 5 ms”

The positive control “should be well-characterized and consistently produce an effect on the QT/QTc interval that is around the threshold of regulatory concern (5 ms, section 2.2.).”

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Statistical Procedures to Assess Assay Sensitivity

• H0: t(PC) - t(P) < c ms for all t

H1: t(PC) - t(P) ≥ c ms for at least one t

• How to choose c? Under discussion.

• Challenge: Multiple endpoint issues (can’t apply IUT

here)

Page 37: Regulatory Perspectives on the Thorough QT/QTc Study 2005 FDA/Industry Workshop Washington DC September 16, 2005 Juan (Joanne) Zhang, Ph.D. CDER/FDA *Acknowledgement:

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Summary• A ‘thorough QT/QTc study’ is negative when the study drug

is non-inferior to placebo in terms of the effect of QT/QTc interval.

• If all the one-sided 95% upper limits of the time-matched mean difference between the drug and placebo after baseline adjustment are below (the non-inferiority margin, 10 ms) at each time point, then we can claim a negative ‘thorough QT/QTc study’.

• By the Intersection-Union test, there is no need for the multiplicity adjustment to claim the drug is non-inferior to placebo.

• If possible, a crossover design should be considered.• Need more thoughts on assay sensitivity issues.