9 Implementation of Statistical Features of a Bayesian Two-armed RAR Trial

Kimber Richter Co-Author
University of Kansas Medical Centre
 
Chuanwu Zhang Co-Author
Sanofi
 
Laura Mussulman Co-Author
University of Kansas Medical Centre
 
Niaman Nazir Co-Author
University of Kansas Medical Centre
 
Byron Gajewski Co-Author
University of Kansas Medical Center
 
Elena Shergina First Author
University of Kansas Medical Center
 
Elena Shergina Presenting Author
University of Kansas Medical Center
 
Tuesday, Aug 6: 10:30 AM - 12:20 PM
1921 
Contributed Posters 
Oregon Convention Center 
Bayesian adaptive designs with response adaptive randomization (RAR) have the potential to benefit more participants in a clinical trial. While there are many papers that describe RAR designs and results, there is a scarcity of works reporting the details of RAR implementation from a statistical point exclusively. In this paper, we introduce the statistical methodology and implementation of the trial Changing the Default (CTD). CTD is a single-center prospective RAR comparative effectiveness trial to compare opt-in to opt-out tobacco treatment approaches for hospitalized patients. The design assumed an uninformative prior, conservative initial allocation ratio, and a higher threshold for stopping for success to protect results from statistical bias. A particular emerging concern of RAR designs is the possibility that time trends will occur during the implementation of a trial. If there is a time trend and the analytic plan does not prespecify an appropriate model, this could lead to a biased trial. Adjustment for time trend was not pre-specified in CTD, but post hoc time-adjusted analysis showed no presence of influential drift.

Keywords

drift analysis

comparative effectiveness trial

Bayesian adaptive designs 

Abstracts


Main Sponsor

Section on Bayesian Statistical Science