Blinded versus unblinded estimation of a correlation coefficient to inform interim design adaptations

2017 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Blinded versus unblinded estimation of a correlation coefficient to inform interim design adaptations​
Kunz, C. U.; Stallard, N.; Parsons, N.; Todd, S. & Friede, T.​ (2017) 
Biometrical Journal59(2) pp. 344​-357​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/bimj.201500233 

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Authors
Kunz, Cornelia Ursula; Stallard, Nigel; Parsons, Nicholas; Todd, Susan; Friede, Tim
Abstract
Regulatory authorities require that the sample size of a confirmatory trial is calculated prior to the start of the trial. However, the sample size quite often depends on parameters that might not be known in advance of the study. Misspecification of these parameters can lead to under-or overestimation of the sample size. Both situations are unfavourable as the first one decreases the power and the latter one leads to a waste of resources. Hence, designs have been suggested that allow a re-assessment of the sample size in an ongoing trial. These methods usually focus on estimating the variance. However, for some methods the performance depends not only on the variance but also on the correlation between measurements. We develop and compare different methods for blinded estimation of the correlation coefficient that are less likely to introduce operational bias when the blinding is maintained. Their performance with respect to bias and standard error is compared to the unblinded estimator. We simulated two different settings: one assuming that all group means are the same and one assuming that different groups have different means. Simulation results show that the naive (one-sample) estimator is only slightly biased and has a standard error comparable to that of the unblinded estimator. However, if the group means differ, other estimators have better performance depending on the sample size per group and the number of groups.
Issue Date
2017
Status
published
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Biometrical Journal 
ISSN
1521-4036; 0323-3847
Sponsor
UK Medical Research Council [G1001344]; EU [FP HEALTH 2013-602144]

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