Process / pipelineClinical / epidemiology

Matched Phase II Clinical Trial

A matched Phase II clinical trial is a single-arm or small-controlled early-efficacy study in which treated patients are paired with matched controls — drawn from historical databases, registries, or concurrent external cohorts — on key prognostic variables such as age, disease stage, and performance status. This design allows preliminary efficacy assessment without a concurrent randomized arm, trading randomization for feasibility while partially controlling for confounding through the matching process.

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Sources

  1. Gehan, E. A. (1961). The determination of the number of patients required in a preliminary and a follow-up trial of a new chemotherapeutic agent. Journal of Chronic Diseases, 13(4), 346–353. DOI: 10.1016/0021-9681(61)90060-1
  2. Simon, R. (1989). Optimal two-stage designs for phase II clinical trials. Controlled Clinical Trials, 10(1), 1–10. DOI: 10.1016/0197-2456(89)90015-9

Related methods

ScholarGateMatched Phase II clinical trial (Matched Phase II Clinical Trial). Retrieved 2026-06-04 from https://scholargate.app/en/epidemiology/matched-phase-ii-clinical-trial