Estimation of treatment effect in a subpopulation: An empirical Bayes approach

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Date
2016
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American English
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Taylor & Francis
Abstract

It is well recognized that the benefit of a medical intervention may not be distributed evenly in the target population due to patient heterogeneity, and conclusions based on conventional randomized clinical trials may not apply to every person. Given the increasing cost of randomized trials and difficulties in recruiting patients, there is a strong need to develop analytical approaches to estimate treatment effect in subpopulations. In particular, due to limited sample size for subpopulations and the need for multiple comparisons, standard analysis tends to yield wide confidence intervals of the treatment effect that are often noninformative. We propose an empirical Bayes approach to combine both information embedded in a target subpopulation and information from other subjects to construct confidence intervals of the treatment effect. The method is appealing in its simplicity and tangibility in characterizing the uncertainty about the true treatment effect. Simulation studies and a real data analysis are presented.

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Shen, C., Li, X., & Jeong, J. (2016). ESTIMATION OF TREATMENT EFFECT IN A SUB-POPULATION: AN EMPIRICAL BAYES APPROACH. Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics, 26(3), 507–518. http://doi.org/10.1080/10543406.2015.1052480
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Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics
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