Title: Surrogate Endpoints
1Surrogate endpoints
- By Dr. Swapnil Chube
- JR2, Dept. of Pharmacology,
- SRTR GMC, Ambajogai.
2DEFINATIONS
- Biomarker
- A characteristic that is objectively
measured and evaluated as an indicator of normal
biological processes, pathogenic processes, or
pharmacological responses to a therapeutic
intervention. - Clinical Endpoint
- It refers to a disease, symptom, sign or a
laboratory measurement that constitutes one of
the target outcomes of a trial.
3- Clinical Endpoints -
- Primary endpoint endpoint for which subjects are
randomised and for which the trial is powered - Secondary endpoint endpoints that are analysed
post hoc for which the trial may not be powered
nor randomised. - Humane endpoint
- The point at which pain/distress is terminated,
minimised or reduced for an entity (such as
experimental animals) in a trial. - This may necessitate withdrawal from the trial
before the target outcome of interest has been
fully reached -
4- Surrogate endpoint
- A biomarker intended to substitute for a clinical
endpoint NIH. - A laboratory measurement / physical sign, used as
a substitute for a clinically meaningful
endpoint, that measures directly how a patient
feels, functions or survives. - Combined endpoint
- This merges a variety of clinical outcomes in one
group.
5HOW THEY RELATE ?
6Biomarkers Categories
- Pharmacodynamic markers
- Determines whether a drug hits the target and has
the expected impact on the biological pathway. - Used to evaluate mechanism of action, PK/PD
correlations determine dose schedule - Predictive markers
- Used to identify patients most likely to respond
or are least likely to suffer an adverse event
when treated with a drug - Prognostic markers
- Associate with the disease outcome regardless of
the treatment - Surrogate endpoints
- Endpoints suggesting clinical outcomes (e.g. LDL
cholesterol, HbA1c)
7Timeline of key events in the history of
biomarkers
- Late 1980s Experimental medicine groups set up
in few companies to develop surrogate endpoints
and link with discovery. - Late 1998 Realization of economics of attrition
started the drive to take attrition earlier, to
manage failures and investing more in biomarkers. - 2000 Industry productivity begins to dip despite
increased target generation, combinatorial
chemistry and high-throughput screening. - Increased investment in biomarkers and
technology greater focus on quality and
standardization, advances in molecular diagnosis,
human genome and concepts of personalized
medicine.
8- Early 2000s Standardization of a language for
biomarkers - FDA critical path paper Stagnation/Innovation
signals that regulators perceive biomarkers as an
important improvement in the drug development
process. - Late 2000s future
- Human target validation will be the main driver
for development of novel drugs, - preclinical studies will be focused on
translational biomarkers, - Drugs developed for disease subtypes with the aid
of molecular diagnostics.
9Biomarkers
- Physiological responses or laboratory tests that
occur in association with a pathological process
and have putative diagnostic and/or prognostic
utility - Biological criteria
- Must be consistent with known pathophysiology
- Must be indicative of disease prognosis
- Must lie on the intervention pathway
- Statistical Criteria
- Changes must be correlated with clinical outcome
- But correlation does not equal causation
10- Biomarkers are considered to be surrogate
endpoints that is, they act as surrogates or
substitutes for clinically meaningful endpoints
(pulse, BP, CD4 count, viral load, Brain
Natriuretic Peptide, PSA, Endothelin-1, VEGF) - Not all biomarkers are surrogate endpoints
- They provide an interim evidence about the safety
and efficacy of treatments while more definitive
clinical data is collected - Advantages
- Allow researchers to design smaller, more
efficient studies - Shortening the time for approval of new
treatments
11- Some Applications of Biomarkers
- Phase I-II clinical studies
- to demonstrate pharmacological activity in
humans - to define dose or plasma level response
relationships as a basis for later studies - Phase III clinical studies
- as a basis for stratifying patients
- for safety monitoring
- as basis for interim analysis of patient
response - as basis for conditional regulatory approval
- Phase IV clinical studies
- Used as a basis for regulatory approval of
generic drugs (e.g. blood levels)
12- Surrogate Endpoints
- Biologically plausible
- Measurable in all patients with the disease
- Predictive of disease progression / remission
- Subject to standardization and validation ?
reliability. - Reproducible
- Effect of treatment on surrogate endpoint should
translate into effect on true endpoint (criteria
of validity).
13- Advantages
- Enables more rapid evaluation of treatment
effects - Trials designed with smaller sample size
- Reduces duration of the study
- Reduces cost of the study
- ? Examples Blood sugar, serum cholesterol,
blood pressure, negative - cultures
- Pitfalls
- May not be a true predictor of clinical outcome
- Adverse effects may outweigh clinical benefit
- May not be useful for all patient populations or
in all stages of a disease - May still need to follow up for true endpoint
- Short term study small no. of patients ? May
not reveal rare adverse effects
14 SURROGATE ENDPOINT
- An ideal surrogate endpoint is one in which all
mechanisms of action to the true endpoint are
mediated through the surrogate endpoint. - In practice, this is often not possible.
15Criteria For Validity
- Validity is decided through stringent
examination of, consistent - performance of the surrogate endpoint, in
META- ANALYSIS of - MULTIPLE PHASE III trials.
- For a surrogate endpoint to be accepted as a
valid substitute for the - true endpoint, the following conditions must
be met - Informative there must be evidence that the
surrogate predicts the true endpoint. - Specific the interventions effect on the true
endpoint must be mediated through the surrogate
endpoint. - Complete study involving the surrogate endpoint
must also capture all the information on adverse
effects associated with the intervention.
16Examples Of Surrogate And True Endpoints
MEDICAL DISEASE TRUE ENDPOINT SURROGATE ENDPOINT
Heart Disease Survival rate Cholesterol level
HIV infection Survival rate CD4 counts
Hyperthyroidism Weight loss, bulging eyeballs, tremors Serum T3 level
Lung cancer Survival rate Tumor shrinkage
17Failure Of Surrogate Endpoints
- They fail because of the following physiological
reasons - Surrogate endpoint NOT ON THE CAUSAL PATHWAY of
disease process.
Here the surrogate measures a symptom unrelated
to the final outcome.
18- E.g. mechanisms leading to the development of
macrovascular complications in type II DM may not
involve change in HbA1c levels. -
- Thus measuring the change in HbA1c levels as a
surrogate endpoint for evaluating effects of
intervention on the macrovascular complications
like TIA, atherosclerosis, etc. induced by type
II DM, isn't validated as a surrogate endpoint.
19- 2. Surrogate endpoint NOT ON ALL PATHWAYS of the
disease process.
- The intervention in this case may show an effect
on surrogate endpoint, but not on an unrelated
pathway to the true endpoint. - In some cases, a particular intervention may have
opposite effects on the 2 pathways ? exactly
wrong conclusions.
20- E.g. evaluation of level of cytokines as an
indicator of inflammation, after use of a mouth
rinse in a patient suffering from peri-odontitis. - In this case, a true endpoint is tooth loss or
increased tooth mobility - Even if the mouth rinse is helpful in reducing
cytokine levels, a patient can still end up with
tooth loss or increased tooth mobility (true
endpoints) - This is because the disease may be progressing
through other pathways involving PGs,
collagenases, etc. (alternate pathway to true
endpoint).
21- 3. Surrogate endpoint NOT ON INTERVENTIONS
PATHWAY
- Here the surrogate endpoint is completely
oblivious to the intervention. - E.g. study effect of mouth rinse on gingivitis
which has signs and symptoms like halitosis and
gingival index (gum swelling, bleeding and
redness)
22- Gingival index is regarded as a surrogate marker.
- A mouth rinse ( intervention) can reduce
halitosis ? implies reduction of gingivitis (
true endpoint ) but has no effect on gingival
index ( surrogate endpoint) - Thus if only the surrogate (gingival index) is
considered here as a measure of treatment of
gingivitis by mouth rinse, then there seems to be
a false negative result with the particular
intervention (mouth rinse) ? i.e. no reduction in
gingivitis.
23- 4. Surrogate endpoint IN MULTI-FACTORIAL DISEASE
- Here a surrogate endpoint is only on one pathway
of a multi- - factorial disease
-
- The disease process here operates with complex
interaction in - multiple pathways.
- The same study may yield different results at
different times, owing - to multiple underlying mechanisms.
24- E.g. a study of a multi-factorial disease like
Dental caries, ?reduction in salivary bacterial
count - surrogate marker - ?pain, sensitivity, food lodgment - true
endpoints - Dental caries is a multi-factorial disease.
- ?Causative factors - diet, size and shape of
the tooth, salivary factors like pH, viscosity,
buffering capacity and bacterial counts. - Even if a particular intervention reduces the
salivary bacterial counts (surrogate endpoint
here), it wont stop / reduce / have an effect on
the true endpoint, because of the persistence of
the other unaffected causative factors. - Thus salivary bacterial counts becomes a weak
surrogate endpoint in this case.
25An Endpoint Hierarchy For Outcome Measures
- Level 1 a true clinical-efficacy measure
- Level 2 a validated surrogate endpoint (for a
specific disease - setting and class of
interventions) - Level 3 a non-validated surrogate endpoint, yet
one - established to be reasonably
likely to predict clinical - benefit (for a specific disease
setting and class of - interventions)
- Level 4 a correlate that is a measure of
biological activity but - that has not been established
to be at a higher level.
26SURROGATE ENDPOINTS OFTEN USED IN CLINICAL
PRACTICE 1. Generally accepted as valid -
SURROGATE MARKER PREDICTS
HbA1c Diabetic MICROVASCULAR complications
FEV1 Mortality in COPD
Blood pressure Primary and secondary cardiovascular events
Viral load Survival in HIV infection
Cholesterol concentration Primary and secondary cardiovascular events
Intraocular pressure Visual loss in glaucoma
27- 2. Doubt still exists about validity -
SURROGATE MARKER PREDICTS
HbA1c Diabetic MACROVASCULAR complications
Bone Mineral Density Fracture risk
PSA Prognosis of prostate cancer
Suppression of arrythmia Long term survival
Carotid intima-media thickness Coronary artery disease
Albuminuria Cardiovascular disease
28Accelerated Approvals Controversy
- In 1992 the FDA formulated a new regulatory
process, often referred to as accelerated
approval" provision (AA). - Found at Subpart H of 21 CFR (Code of Federal
Regulations) - It became critical during search for effective
treatments of AIDS and HIV related disease in
early 1990s. - Under the AA process, marketing approval can be
provided for interventions when they have been
shown to have compelling effects on Level 3
biological markers, where these effects are
reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit.
29- Once AA has been granted to an intervention, the
sponsor then is responsible to complete, in a
timely manner, one or more clinical trials that
will validate that the intervention truly does
provide meaningful benefit on tangible measures
of clinical benefit. - These validation trials should meet all of the
usual criteria for quality of trial conduct and
reliability of conclusions, including usual
levels for statistical strength of evidence,
which would be required for providing full
regulatory approval in non-AA settings. - AA is to provide patients earlier access to
promising new interventions for diseases that are
life-threatening or induce irreversible
morbidity, when the inadequacy of existing
therapies leaves an important unmet clinical
need.
30- Although this motivation is easily justified, the
actual implementation of the AA process is
controversial. - Controversies are
-
- The average time between the granting of
marketing through AA and the completion of
ongoing validation trials was projected to be ten
years. - Initial validation trials that had been completed
indicated minimal treatment benefit, yet
marketing of the intervention continued.
31 CONCLUSION
- Surrogate markers are born of phase II trials and
are not necessarily ideal for use in clinical
decision making. Phase III trials should be the
true testing ground for the validity of surrogate
markers. - There are some valid surrogate markers of disease
progression which can be reliably used to monitor
chronic conditions and as treatment goals. - However, the clinical utility of many surrogates
is open to questions and their validity is
largely untested. - Practitioners need to keep in mind that some
widely used surrogate markers of disease have not
been adequately validated for use in clinical
situations.
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34THANK YOU !