Bias reduction using surrogate endpoints as auxiliary variables (Q2317884): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 23:43, 19 March 2024
scientific article
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English | Bias reduction using surrogate endpoints as auxiliary variables |
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Bias reduction using surrogate endpoints as auxiliary variables (English)
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13 August 2019
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In clinical trials the endpoints are very often missing. In such cases, statisticians need to handle it. Missing data are typically classified into three groups according to their causes: \begin{itemize} \item[--] missing completely at random (MCAR), \item[--] missing at random (MAR), \item[--] not missing at random (NMAR): the missingness is neither MCAR nor MAR. \end{itemize} When a missing-data mechanism is NMAR, the bias of a direct-likelihood estimator is compared with and without an auxiliary variable. In this study, the assumption that given auxiliary variables a treatment group variable and the clinical endpoints are independent, is not used. There are cases where inclusion of an auxiliary variable can increase the bias in a simple setup, where the clinical endpoint and auxiliary variable are normally distributed. Conditions are derived for an auxiliary variable to reduce or increase the bias.
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auxiliary variables
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surrogate endpoints
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direct-likelihood
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not missing at random missingness data
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