Journal article

Designing group dose-response studies in the presence of transmission

DJ Price, NG Bean, JV Ross, J Tuke

Mathematical Biosciences | ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC | Published : 2018

Abstract

Dose-response studies are used throughout pharmacology, toxicology and in clinical research to determine safe, effective, or hazardous doses of a substance. When involving animals, the subjects are often housed in groups; this is in fact mandatory in many countries for social animals, on ethical grounds. An issue that may consequently arise is that of unregulated between-subject dosing (transmission), where a subject may transmit the substance to another subject. Transmission will obviously impact the assessment of the dose-response relationship, and will lead to biases if not properly modelled. Here we present a method for determining the optimal design – pertaining to the size of groups, t..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge


Funding Acknowledgements

JVR acknowledges the support of the ARC (Future Fellowship FT130100254; CoE ACEMS) and the NHMRC (CRE PRISM<SUP>2</SUP>). The authors would like to thank Andrew Conlan and Andrew Grant (Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge), for their advice regarding the modelling, and the technical aspects of dosing with infectious bacteria, respectively.