Analytical Method Comparison Based upon Statistical Power Calculations
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Pharmaceutical Research
- Vol. 09 (5) , 601-606
- https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1015885607013
Abstract
Testing for the equivalence of results generated by different analytical methodology is a common practice in the pharmaceutical sciences. Methodology changes are implemented for both scientific and economic reasons during a scientific study. Thus, the need to demonstrate the appropriateness of considering data generated by distinct methods as part of a single information population arises. This paper describes a rapid and simple approach to the statistical design and interpretation of method comparison experiments. The approach presented is based upon a statistical power calculation technique, a knowledge of the variability associated with the methods to be compared and the criteria for equivalence (the limits within which differences become immeasurable or, for practical purposes, insignificant). Reference tables are included which show necessary sample sizes for comparison experiments for common combinations of these three variables.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Method Validation Revisited: A Chemometric ApproachPharmaceutical Research, 1990
- Using the coefficient of correlation in method-comparison studies.Clinical Chemistry, 1987
- A procedure for estimating bias between quantitative analytical methodsJournal of Analytical Methods in Chemistry, 1986
- Comparison of product moment and rank correlation coefficients in the assessment of laboratory method-comparison data.Clinical Chemistry, 1978
- Principal component analysis. Alternative to referee methods in method comparison studiesAnalytical Chemistry, 1975
- Statistical Evaluation of Method-Comparison DataClinical Chemistry, 1975
- Use and Interpretation of Common Statistical Tests in Method-Comparison StudiesClinical Chemistry, 1973