A walk on the wild side - the Bear way [RSABE / ABEL]

posted by d_labes  – Berlin, Germany, 2010-03-26 15:01 (5529 d 22:15 ago) – Posting: # 4977
Views: 26,646

Dear All!

This should read in connection with my previous post in this thread.
Helmut, I have posted to you because I otherwise had to post to myself.

After touting the anti-conservatism of the all-fixed-effects-approach of the Liu ANOVA and noticing the fact that omitting SxF results in the classical model, hopefully with SxF incorporated in the error term.
I was interested in going the Bear way for replicate designs because meanwhile I hazard a guess that EMA is expecting this from us.

Some little evidence:
But then I remembered a paper coming under my eyes some times ago:

S.A. Willavize, E.A. Morgenthin
Comparison of models for average bioequivalence in replicate cross-over designs
Pharm. Stat. Volume 5 Issue 3, Pages 201 - 211 (2006)
Published Online: 24 May 2006

The authors have simulated data of a TRTR/RTRT design distributed exactly according to the models underlying the evaluation methods, namely according to the classical model without any SxF interaction and some variants of including such an interaction. Various values of the involved variabilities were employed. For each setting 1500 datasets were simulated with 24 subjects.
These data were then evaluated with each evaluation method.

Here is a part of the results of evaluations with the classical model, also Proc Mixed was employed instead of Proc GLM (the Bear way):
  Probability of concluding BE at T/R = 0.8 (=alpha)
Data model1       0.041 ... 0.054
Data model2       0.047 ... 0.174  sic! 
Data model3       0.047 ... 0.129

model1=classical model
model2=FDA model with SxF
model3=Ekbohm-Melander (very similar to the Liu ANOVA)

Although not mentioned exactly in the paper I suppose that the greatest anti-conservatism / alpha-inflation occurred with drastic values of the SxF interaction.
Seems the SxF component can not always incorporated into the error term of the simple classical evaluation.

Of course the impact of these results depend on the belief if the SxF is a real phenomenon in bioequivalence studies. For instance in

Endrenyi, Tothfalusi
Subject-by-formulation interaction in determination of individual bioequivalence: Bias and prevalence
Pharm. Res. 16 (1999), 186-190

and others it is strongly argued against it in showing that the datasets used by FDA during evaluation of IBE are compatible with a SxF=0.

Regards,

Detlew

Complete thread:

UA Flag
Activity
 Admin contact
23,424 posts in 4,927 threads, 1,672 registered users;
122 visitors (0 registered, 122 guests [including 35 identified bots]).
Forum time: 14:17 CEST (Europe/Vienna)

A statistical analysis, properly conducted, is a delicate dissection of
uncertainties, a surgery of suppositions.    Micheal J. Moroney

The Bioequivalence and Bioavailability Forum is hosted by
BEBAC Ing. Helmut Schütz
HTML5