Stats
Seminar on control charts and adverse events (June 5, 2006).
Category: Adverse events in clinical trials
I took some time to expand my May 30, 2005 weblog entry on
accrual rates and developed a seminar which I will present to the Statistics journal club
at KUMC today. The handout for this talk combines that
weblog entry with a brief tutorial on quality control.
I received some valuable feedback. One comment was on the use of the log transformation,
and I might want to show this graph on a different scale. Another comment was on the use of
Bayesian statistics to model accrual rates. As the data accumulates, you would get more
information about the estimated stopping date of the study or about the estimated total
sample size at the end of the study. It would be important to get a good prior
distribution or possibly both an optimistic and a pessimistic prior. If even an optimistic
prior is swamped by actual data suggesting that accrual is slow enough that no realistic
sample size would emerge at the of the study, then that might be the point at which you
decide to cut your losses.
This web page was written and was last modified on
09/24/2007.