balakotu ★ India, 2012-06-21 10:28 (4749 d 10:03 ago) Posting: # 8821 Views: 7,451 |
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Dear all, Please clarify following Criteria, We are going to conduct one "Two-Stage" bioequivalence study. In this study initially we had fixed the sample size as maximum of 80 subjects (Both stage1 and stage2). In stage-1 we include 40 subjects and based on stage1 data we will precede with a maximum sample size of 40 subjects in stage-2 (sample size will be ≤ 40). Is there any statistical method to decide sample size in stage2? Regards Kotu Edit: Category and subject line changed. [Helmut] |
Helmut ★★★ ![]() ![]() Vienna, Austria, 2012-06-21 18:05 (4749 d 02:26 ago) @ balakotu Posting: # 8822 Views: 6,324 |
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Dear Kotu! ❝ We are going to conduct one "Two-Stage" bioequivalence study. In this study initially we had fixed the sample size as maximum of 80 subjects (Both stage1 and stage2). Both Potvin et al. (2007)1 and Montague et al. (2011)2 don’t set a fixed maximum sample size. See the discussion section in Potvin et al.: More work needs to be done to examine the extension to more than two stages, issues associated with pooling results from two or more stages, inclusion of a futility rule, minimum sample sizes for second stage if performed, and upper limits on the total sample size. If you are including a fixed sample size in your method you are leaving the validated range covered by the papers. Intuitively I would say you are only jeopardizing power (higher producer’s risk) – but actually I don’t know whether the patient’s risk is unaffected. Since you plan for a maximum sample size of 80 subjects, I guess you expect a high CV (GMR 95%, 80% power)? Have a look at Potvin’s Table II, Method C (36 subjects in Stage 1 because 40 are not given): With a CV of 40% the sample sizes in Stage 2 are 34 (median), with 5 and 95% percentiles of 0 and 76. In other words, 66% of studies proceed to Stage 2; it’s possible that you need more than your maximum sample size to demonstrate BE. If you expect a GMR of 90% and plan for power 80% (Montague, Method D) let’s see another example (Stage 1 36 subjects, CV 30%): 97% chance to proceed to Stage 2, median sample size in Stage 2 58 subjects (5–95%: 22 and 102 subjects). ❝ In stage-1 we include 40 subjects and based on stage1 data we will precede with a maximum sample size of 40 subjects in stage-2 (sample size will be ≤ 40). See above. ❝ Is there any statistical method to decide sample size in stage2? You run a conventional estimation of the total sample size (ntotal) based on the assumed GMR (fixed at 0.95 – Potvin or 0.90 – Montague), power 80%, adjusted α of 0.0294 (Potvin) or 0.0280 (Montague), and the CV observed in Stage 1. Then n2 = ntotal – n1. I recommend Detlew Labes’ packagePowerTOST for R.Example: 40 subjects dosed in stage 1, 2 drop outs (n1 38), fixed GMR 95% (Potvin), CV 43%, adjusted α for the pooled analysis 0.0294 (= 94.12% confidence interval in the pooled analysis)
For Montague’s Method D use alpha=0.0280 and theta0=0.90 instead.Other opinions (ElMaestro, Detlew)?
— Dif-tor heh smusma 🖖🏼 Довге життя Україна! ![]() Helmut Schütz ![]() The quality of responses received is directly proportional to the quality of the question asked. 🚮 Science Quotes |
ElMaestro ★★★ Denmark, 2012-06-22 03:43 (4748 d 16:48 ago) @ Helmut Posting: # 8823 Views: 6,250 |
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Hi HS, ❝ Other opinions (ElMaestro, Detlew)? No sir, not from me! You have said it all and even more. ![]() — Pass or fail! ElMaestro |
d_labes ★★★ Berlin, Germany, 2012-06-22 10:45 (4748 d 09:47 ago) @ Helmut Posting: # 8824 Views: 6,195 |
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Dear Helmut! ❝ If you are including a fixed sample size in your method you are leaving the validated range covered by the papers. Intuitively I would say you are only jeopardizing power (higher producer’s risk) – but actually I don’t know whether the patient’s risk is unaffected. Full ACK! From some sparse own simulations I did (Potvin B, Nmax=120) in the past I can add: Patient's risk found below 5%, power fairly above 80% if first stage N is not too small and CV<30%. For CV>30% (30, 35 and 40% simulated) a remarkable decrease in power was seen. But these simulations didn't cover the full range of CV and n(stage1) to assure that patient's risk is bound to ≤0.05 under all circumstances. — Regards, Detlew |