4.5 Article

On the covariate-adjusted estimation for an overall treatment difference with data from a randomized comparative clinical trial

Journal

BIOSTATISTICS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 256-273

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/biostatistics/kxr050

Keywords

ANCOVA; Cross validation; Efficiency augmentation; Mayo PBC data; Semi-parametric efficiency

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AI052817, RC4 CA155940, U01 AI068616, UM1 AI068634, R01 AI024643, U54 LM008748, R01 HL089778]

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To estimate an overall treatment difference with data from a randomized comparative clinical study, baseline covariates are often utilized to increase the estimation precision. Using the standard analysis of covariance technique for making inferences about such an average treatment difference may not be appropriate, especially when the fitted model is nonlinear. On the other hand, the novel augmentation procedure recently studied, for example, by Zhang and others (2008. Improving efficiency of inferences in randomized clinical trials using auxiliary covariates. Biometrics 64, 707-715) is quite flexible. However, in general, it is not clear how to select covariates for augmentation effectively. An overly adjusted estimator may inflate the variance and in some cases be biased. Furthermore, the results from the standard inference procedure by ignoring the sampling variation from the variable selection process may not be valid. In this paper, we first propose an estimation procedure, which augments the simple treatment contrast estimator directly with covariates. The new proposal is asymptotically equivalent to the aforementioned augmentation method. To select covariates, we utilize the standard lasso procedure. Furthermore, to make valid inference from the resulting lasso-type estimator, a cross validation method is used. The validity of the new proposal is justified theoretically and empirically. We illustrate the procedure extensively with a well-known primary biliary cirrhosis clinical trial data set.

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