Variable names, lexical order? [Regulatives / Guidelines]

posted by weiguo2122 – 2023-04-21 16:15 (364 d 23:59 ago) – Posting: # 23534
Views: 1,471

❝ 74.02% (90% CI: 65.69–83.41%) is correct. Confirmed in Phoenix/WinNonlin, R, and ‘manually’ in a spreadsheet. See BEQool’s post above for the likely explanation.

❝ I don’t speak SAS; try to remove to dollar-characters from the headers in your data statement.


Thanks all for your replying.

1. I accidentally put "weiguo2122$2gmail.com" as my username, now it is hard to make a change because "edit profile" do not allow me make change". If possible, please change my username as "Weiguo21224" at your end.

2. I carefully reviewed previous discussion. My understanding is that "T" and "R" in FDA code do represent the "Test drug" and "Reference drug" respectively. It should be:

ESTIMATE 'T (the large/later one in lexical order, Reference drug) vs. R (the small/early one in lexical order, Test drug') TRT 1 -1/CL ALPHA=0.1;

Right?

Best!

David


Edit: Full quote removed. Please delete everything from the text of the original poster which is not necessary in understanding your answer; see also this post #5[Helmut]

Complete thread:

UA Flag
Activity
 Admin contact
22,988 posts in 4,825 threads, 1,654 registered users;
99 visitors (0 registered, 99 guests [including 4 identified bots]).
Forum time: 16:14 CEST (Europe/Vienna)

The whole purpose of education is
to turn mirrors into windows.    Sydney J. Harris

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