Bayesian subset analysis: application to studying treatment‐by‐gender interactions
- 20 September 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Statistics in Medicine
- Vol. 21 (19) , 2909-2916
- https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.1295
Abstract
Evaluating treatment effects within subsets of patients plays a major part of the analysis of many major clinical trials. Clinicians are often impressed by the heterogeneity of patient populations in clinical trials and hence are interested in examining subset effects. Statisticians generally discourage subset analysis or suggest that clinicians ‘do subset analysis but do not believe it’. This advice, however, is a sign of the inadequacy of the analytic methods generally used for subset analysis. Separate analysis of many subsets, and basing conclusions on whether the observed treatment difference achieves significance at the 0.05 level, is likely to yield erroneous conclusions. Making the separate analysis of subsets dependent on demonstration of a statistically significant treatment‐by‐subset interaction is also not an effective analytic strategy because of the limited power of interaction tests. This paper describes a Bayesian approach to subset analysis developed by Simon, Dixon and Freidlin. The method avoids many of the problems of subset analysis because it is not ‘separate’ analysis of subsets. Instead, subset‐specific treatment effects are estimated as an average of observed within‐subset differences and overall differences; the two components are weighted by thea prioriestimate of the likelihood of qualitative treatment by subset interactions. Hence, the Bayesian method proposed permits subset analyses incorporating the assumption that qualitative interactions are unlikely. The methodology is applied to the problem of designing and analysing clinical trials to estimate treatment effects for males and females. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Placebo-Controlled Trials and Active-Control Trials in the Evaluation of New Treatments. Part 1: Ethical and Scientific IssuesAnnals of Internal Medicine, 2000
- Randomised trial of home-based psychosocial nursing intervention for patients recovering from myocardial infarctionThe Lancet, 1997
- Bayesian design and analysis of two x two factorial clinical trials.Published by JSTOR ,1997
- A Bayesian model for evaluating specificity of treatment effects in clinical trialsPublished by Springer Nature ,1995
- Bayesian Subset AnalysisPublished by JSTOR ,1991
- Empirical Bayes estimates of subgroup effects in clinical trialsControlled Clinical Trials, 1990
- Estimating a Population of Parameter Values Using Bayes and Empirical Bayes MethodsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1984
- A Bayesian approach to the interpretation of subgroup results in clinical trialsJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1982