4.2 Article

Effect of heteroscedasticity between treatment groups on mixed-effects models for repeated measures

Journal

PHARMACEUTICAL STATISTICS
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 578-592

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pst.1872

Keywords

coverage probability; covariance structure; missingness; mixed-effects model; robust covariance estimator

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Mixed-effects models for repeated measures (MMRM) analyses using the Kenward-Roger method for adjusting standard errors and degrees of freedom in an unstructured (UN) covariance structure are increasingly becoming common in primary analyses for group comparisons in longitudinal clinical trials. We evaluate the performance of an MMRM-UN analysis using the Kenward-Roger method when the variance of outcome between treatment groups is unequal. In addition, we provide alternative approaches for valid inferences in the MMRM analysis framework. Two simulations are conducted in cases with (1) unequal variance but equal correlation between the treatment groups and (2) unequal variance and unequal correlation between the groups. Our results in the first simulation indicate that MMRM-UN analysis using the Kenward-Roger method based on a common covariance matrix for the groups yields notably poor coverage probability (CP) with confidence intervals for the treatment effect when both the variance and the sample size between the groups are disparate. In addition, even when the randomization ratio is 1:1, the CP will fall seriously below the nominal confidence level if a treatment group with a large dropout proportion has a larger variance. Mixed-effects models for repeated measures analysis with the Mancl and DeRouen covariance estimator shows relatively better performance than the traditional MMRM-UN analysis method. In the second simulation, the traditional MMRM-UN analysis leads to bias of the treatment effect and yields notably poor CP. Mixed-effects models for repeated measures analysis fitting separate UN covariance structures for each group provides an unbiased estimate of the treatment effect and an acceptable CP. We do not recommend MMRM-UN analysis using the Kenward-Roger method based on a common covariance matrix for treatment groups, although it is frequently seen in applications, when heteroscedasticity between the groups is apparent in incomplete longitudinal data.

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