Improving Inference of Some Clinical Studies Using Ranked Auxiliary Covariates
Document Type
Presentation
Presentation Date
3-15-2015
Abstract or Description
The main objective in a randomized clinical trial of studies such as in cancer, AIDS, etc. is to compare the outcome of interest between two or more groups. Clinical trials are considered the “gold standard” of biomedical research and of its strengths are the ability to measure changes and/or evaluate of treatments over time with maximizing power of statistics and validity. Clinical trials are expensive, and the cost of clinical trials on medical treatments and devices, public health investigators are increasing with each phase and continue to escalate, especially in phase III. The idea proposed in this project is to use auxiliary covariates by adopting Ranked Set Sampling (RSS) technique to select the subjects for each treatment-arms, to utilize inexpensive auxiliary covariates information into a randomized clinical trials. The goal is to provide a more precise estimator of the population mean of the outcome of interest to recover the difficult to obtain information, without making any additional assumptions other than those already necessary for (RSS) and the ordinary least square estimators from a regression model to hold.
Sponsorship/Conference/Institution
Eastern North American Region International Biometric Society Annual Conference (ENAR)
Location
Miami, FL
Recommended Citation
Samawi, Hani M., Rajai Jabrah, Robert L. Vogel, Daniel F. Linder.
2015.
"Improving Inference of Some Clinical Studies Using Ranked Auxiliary Covariates."
Biostatistics Faculty Presentations.
Presentation 85.
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/biostat-facpres/85