4.5 Article

Response-adaptive randomization for clinical trials with adjustment for covariate imbalance

Journal

STATISTICS IN MEDICINE
Volume 29, Issue 17, Pages 1761-1768

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/sim.3978

Keywords

adaptive randomization; clinical trial design; degree of imbalance

Funding

  1. U.S.A. National Institute of Health [5P50 CA100632, 5PO1 CA055164, 1PO1 CA108631-01]

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In clinical trials with a small sample size, the characteristics (covariates) of patients assigned to different treatment arms may not be well balanced. This may lead to an inflated type 1 error rate. This problem can be more severe in trials that use response-adaptive randomization rather than equal randomization because the former may result in smaller sample sizes for some treatment arms. We have developed a patient allocation scheme for trials with binary outcomes to adjust the covariate imbalance during response-adaptive randomization. We used simulation studies to evaluate the performance of the proposed design. The proposed design keeps the important advantage of a standard response-adaptive design, that is to assign more patients to the better treatment arms, and thus it is ethically appealing. On the other hand, the proposed design improves over the standard response-adaptive design by controlling covariate imbalance between treatment arms, maintaining the nominal type I error rate, and offering greater power. Copyright (C) 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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