A global logrank test for adaptive treatment strategies based on observational studies.

TitleA global logrank test for adaptive treatment strategies based on observational studies.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsLi, Zhiguo, Marcia Valenstein, Paul Pfeiffer, and Dara Ganoczy
JournalStat Med
Volume33
Issue5
Pagination760-71
Date Published2014 Feb 28
ISSN1097-0258
KeywordsAntidepressive Agents, Computer Simulation, Depression, Humans, Observational Studies as Topic, Patient Compliance, Probability, Proportional Hazards Models, Research Design, United States
Abstract

In studying adaptive treatment strategies, a natural question that is of paramount interest is whether there is any significant difference among all possible treatment strategies. When the outcome variable of interest is time-to-event, we propose an inverse probability weighted logrank test for testing the equivalence of a fixed set of pre-specified adaptive treatment strategies based on data from an observational study. The weights take into account both the possible selection bias in an observational study and the fact that the same subject may be consistent with more than one treatment strategy. The asymptotic distribution of the weighted logrank statistic under the null hypothesis is obtained. We show that, in an observational study where the treatment selection probabilities need to be estimated, the estimation of these probabilities does not have an effect on the asymptotic distribution of the weighted logrank statistic, as long as the estimation of the parameters in the models for these probabilities is n-consistent. Finite sample performance of the test is assessed via a simulation study. We also show in the simulation that the test can be pretty robust to misspecification of the models for the probabilities of treatment selection. The method is applied to analyze data on antidepressant adherence time from an observational database maintained at the Department of Veterans Affairs' Serious Mental Illness Treatment Research and Evaluation Center.

DOI10.1002/sim.5987
Alternate JournalStat Med
Original PublicationA global logrank test for adaptive treatment strategies based on observational studies.
PubMed ID24108518
PubMed Central IDPMC3961568
Grant ListP01 CA142538 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
Project: