Intent-to-treat analysis for longitudinal studies with drop-outs.

R Little, L Yau
Author Information
  1. R Little: Department of Biostatistics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109, USA.

Abstract

We consider intent-to-treat (IT) analysis of clinical trials involving longitudinal data subject to drop-out. Common methods, such as Last Observation Carried Forward imputation or incomplete-data methods based on models that assume random dropout, have serious drawbacks in the IT setting. We propose a method that involves multiple imputation of the missing values following drop-out based on an "as treated" model, using actual dose after drop-out if this is known, or imputed doses that incorporate a variety of plausible alternative assumptions if unknown. The multiply-imputed data sets are then analyzed using IT methods, were subjects are classified by randomization group rather than by the dose actually received. Results from the multiply-imputed data sets are combined using the methods of Rubin (1987, Multiple Imputation for Nonresponse in Surveys). A novel feature of the proposed method is that the models for imputation differ from the model used for the analysis of the filled-in data. The method is applied to data on a clinical trial for Tacrine in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.

Grants

  1. P30 MH38330-12/NIMH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Alzheimer Disease
Biometry
Data Interpretation, Statistical
Humans
Likelihood Functions
Longitudinal Studies
Models, Statistical
Nootropic Agents
Patient Dropouts
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Tacrine

Chemicals

Nootropic Agents
Tacrine

Word Cloud

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