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Meta-analytisk fase I klinisk forsøg×Netværksmetaanalyse×
FagområdeEpidemiologiEvidenssyntese
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Oprindelsesår2000s–2010s2002
OphavspersonNeuenschwander, Capkun-Niggli, Branson, Spiegelhalter and colleaguesLumley (2002)
TypeBayesian meta-analytic dose-finding designMethod
Oprindelig kildeNeuenschwander, B., Capkun-Niggli, G., Branson, M., & Spiegelhalter, D. J. (2010). Summarizing historical information on controls in clinical trials. Clinical Trials, 7(1), 5–18. DOI ↗Lumley, T. (2002). Network meta-analysis for indirect treatment comparisons. Statistics in Medicine, 21(16), 2313–2324. DOI ↗
Aliassermeta-analytic dose-finding, MAP prior Phase I, MAPT design, Bayesian meta-analytic Phase IMixed Treatment Comparison, MTC, Indirect Comparison Meta-Analysis
Relaterede11
ResuméA meta-analytic Phase I clinical trial formally pools evidence from prior Phase I studies — using Bayesian or frequentist meta-analysis — to construct an informative prior (or summary estimate) for dose-toxicity relationships before or during a new first-in-human or early-phase study. The approach increases statistical efficiency, reduces the number of patients exposed to subtherapeutic or toxic doses, and accelerates dose selection by systematically leveraging all relevant historical dose-finding data.Network meta-analysis (NMA) is a systematic method for comparing multiple interventions simultaneously within a single analytical framework, incorporating both direct evidence (head-to-head trials) and indirect evidence (comparisons via common comparators). First formalized by Lumley in 2002, NMA allows researchers to rank treatments and quantify comparative effectiveness even when some treatment pairs have never been directly studied.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Meta-analytic Phase I clinical trial · Network Meta-Analysis. Hentet 2026-06-19 fra https://scholargate.app/da/compare