The shrinking or disappearing observed treatment effect |
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Authors: | Christy Chuang‐Stein Simon Kirby |
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Affiliation: | 1. Statistical Research and Consulting Center, Pfizer Inc, , Michigan, USA;2. Research Statistics, Pfizer Inc, , Cambridge, UK |
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Abstract: | It is frequently noted that an initial clinical trial finding was not reproduced in a later trial. This is often met with some surprise. Yet, there is a relatively straightforward reason partially responsible for this observation. In this article, we examine this reason by first reviewing some findings in a recent publication in the Journal of the American Medical Association. To help explain the non‐negligible chance of failing to reproduce a previous positive finding, we compare a series of trials to successive diagnostic tests used for identifying a condition. To help explain the suspicion that the treatment effect, when observed in a subsequent trial, seems to have decreased in magnitude, we draw a conceptual analogy between phases II–III development stages and interim analyses of a trial with a group sequential design. Both analogies remind us that what we observed in an early trial could be a false positive or a random high. We discuss statistical sources for these occurrences and discuss why it is important for statisticians to take these into consideration when designing and interpreting trial results. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | overestimation shrinkage regression to the mean |
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