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Autori principali: Lasch, Florian, Guizzaro, Lorenzo, Loh, Wen Wei
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2024
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.10943
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author Lasch, Florian
Guizzaro, Lorenzo
Loh, Wen Wei
author_facet Lasch, Florian
Guizzaro, Lorenzo
Loh, Wen Wei
contents For handling intercurrent events in clinical trials, one of the strategies outlined in the ICH E9(R1) addendum targets the hypothetical scenario of non-occurrence of the intercurrent event. While this strategy is often implemented by setting data after the intercurrent event to missing even if they have been collected, g-estimation allows for a more efficient estimation by using the information contained in post-IE data. As the g-estimation methods have largely developed outside of randomised clinical trials, optimisations for the application in clinical trials are possible. In this work, we describe and investigate the performance of modifications to the established g-estimation methods, leveraging the assumption that some intercurrent events are expected to have the same impact on the outcome regardless of the timing of their occurrence. In a simulation study in Alzheimer disease, the modifications show a substantial efficiency advantage for the estimation of an estimand that applies the hypothetical strategy to the use of symptomatic treatment while retaining unbiasedness and adequate type I error control.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_10943
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Comparison of g-estimation approaches for handling symptomatic medication at multiple timepoints in Alzheimer's Disease with a hypothetical strategy
Lasch, Florian
Guizzaro, Lorenzo
Loh, Wen Wei
Methodology
For handling intercurrent events in clinical trials, one of the strategies outlined in the ICH E9(R1) addendum targets the hypothetical scenario of non-occurrence of the intercurrent event. While this strategy is often implemented by setting data after the intercurrent event to missing even if they have been collected, g-estimation allows for a more efficient estimation by using the information contained in post-IE data. As the g-estimation methods have largely developed outside of randomised clinical trials, optimisations for the application in clinical trials are possible. In this work, we describe and investigate the performance of modifications to the established g-estimation methods, leveraging the assumption that some intercurrent events are expected to have the same impact on the outcome regardless of the timing of their occurrence. In a simulation study in Alzheimer disease, the modifications show a substantial efficiency advantage for the estimation of an estimand that applies the hypothetical strategy to the use of symptomatic treatment while retaining unbiasedness and adequate type I error control.
title Comparison of g-estimation approaches for handling symptomatic medication at multiple timepoints in Alzheimer's Disease with a hypothetical strategy
topic Methodology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.10943