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Key Features: Provides the taxonomy of the concepts and a
navigation tool for the field of DTx. Covers important strategic
aspects of the DTx industry, thereby helping investors, developers,
and regulators gain a better appreciation of the potential value of
DTx. Expounds on many existing and emerging state-of-the art
scientific and technological tools, as well as data privacy,
ethical and regulatory considerations for DTx product development.
Presents several case studies of successful development of some of
the most remarkable DTx products. Provides some perspectives and
forward-looking statements on the future of digital medicine.
Mathematical and Statistical Skills in the Biopharmaceutical
Industry: A Pragmatic Approach describes a philosophy of efficient
problem solving showcased using examples pertinent to the
biostatistics function in clinical drug development. It was written
to share a quintessence of the authors' experiences acquired during
many years of relevant work in the biopharmaceutical industry. The
book will be useful will be useful for biopharmaceutical industry
statisticians at different seniority levels and for graduate
students who consider a biostatistics-related career in this
industry. Features: Describes a system of principles for pragmatic
problem solving in clinical drug development. Discusses differences
in the work of a biostatistician in small pharma and big pharma.
Explains the importance/relevance of statistical programming and
data management for biostatistics and necessity for integration on
various levels. Describes some useful statistical background that
can be capitalized upon in the drug development enterprise.
Explains some hot topics and current trends in biostatistics in
simple, non-technical terms. Discusses incompleteness of any system
of standard operating procedures, rules and regulations. Provides a
classification of scoring systems and proposes a novel approach for
evaluation of the safety outcome for a completed randomized
clinical trial. Presents applications of the problem solving
philosophy in a highly problematic transfusion field where many
investigational compounds have failed. Discusses realistic planning
of open-ended projects.
Is adaptive randomization always better than traditional
fixed-schedule randomization? Which procedures should be used and
under which circumstances? What special considerations are required
for adaptive randomized trials? What kind of statistical inference
should be used to achieve valid and unbiased treatment comparisons
following adaptive randomization designs? Modern Adaptive
Randomized Clinical Trials: Statistical and Practical Aspects
answers these questions and more. From novel designs to
cutting-edge applications, this book presents several new and key
developments in adaptive randomization. It also offers a fresh and
critical look at a number of already-classical topics. Featuring
contributions from statisticians, clinical trialists, and
subject-matter experts in academia and the pharmaceutical industry,
the text: Clarifies the taxonomy of the concept of adaptive
randomization Discusses restricted, covariate-adaptive,
response-adaptive, and covariate-adjusted response-adaptive (CARA)
randomization designs, as well as randomized designs with treatment
selection Gives an exposition to many novel adaptive randomization
techniques such as brick tunnel randomization, targeted least
absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO)-based CARA
randomization, multi-arm multi-stage (MAMS) designs, to name a few
Addresses the issues of statistical inference following
covariate-adaptive and response-adaptive randomization designs
Describes a successful implementation of a single pivotal phase
II/III adaptive trial in infants with proliferating hemangioma
Explores some practical aspects of phase II dose-ranging studies
and examines statistical monitoring and interim analysis issues in
response-adaptive randomized clinical trials Modern Adaptive
Randomized Clinical Trials: Statistical and Practical Aspects
covers a wide spectrum of topics related to adaptive randomization
designs in contemporary clinical trials. The book provides a
thorough exploration of the merits of adaptive randomization and
aids in identifying when it is appropriate to apply such designs in
practice.
Mathematical and Statistical Skills in the Biopharmaceutical
Industry: A Pragmatic Approach describes a philosophy of efficient
problem solving showcased using examples pertinent to the
biostatistics function in clinical drug development. It was written
to share a quintessence of the authors' experiences acquired during
many years of relevant work in the biopharmaceutical industry. The
book will be useful will be useful for biopharmaceutical industry
statisticians at different seniority levels and for graduate
students who consider a biostatistics-related career in this
industry. Features: Describes a system of principles for pragmatic
problem solving in clinical drug development. Discusses differences
in the work of a biostatistician in small pharma and big pharma.
Explains the importance/relevance of statistical programming and
data management for biostatistics and necessity for integration on
various levels. Describes some useful statistical background that
can be capitalized upon in the drug development enterprise.
Explains some hot topics and current trends in biostatistics in
simple, non-technical terms. Discusses incompleteness of any system
of standard operating procedures, rules and regulations. Provides a
classification of scoring systems and proposes a novel approach for
evaluation of the safety outcome for a completed randomized
clinical trial. Presents applications of the problem solving
philosophy in a highly problematic transfusion field where many
investigational compounds have failed. Discusses realistic planning
of open-ended projects.
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