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Standardization for Subgroup Analysis in Randomized Controlled Trials
Authors:Ravi Varadhan  Sue-Jane Wang
Affiliation:1. Center on Aging and Health, Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology , School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore , Maryland , USA;2. Department of Biostatistics , Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore , Maryland , USA rvaradhan@jhmi.edu;4. Office of Biostatistics, Office of Translational Service , Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration , Washington , DC , USA;5. Engineering and Applied Science Programs for Professionals , Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore , Maryland , USA
Abstract:Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) emphasize the average or overall effect of a treatment (ATE) on the primary endpoint. Even though the ATE provides the best summary of treatment efficacy, it is of critical importance to know whether the treatment is similarly efficacious in important, predefined subgroups. This is why the RCTs, in addition to the ATE, also present the results of subgroup analysis for preestablished subgroups. Typically, these are marginal subgroup analysis in the sense that treatment effects are estimated in mutually exclusive subgroups defined by only one baseline characteristic at a time (e.g., men versus women, young versus old). Forest plot is a popular graphical approach for displaying the results of subgroup analysis. These plots were originally used in meta-analysis for displaying the treatment effects from independent studies. Treatment effect estimates of different marginal subgroups are, however, not independent. Correlation between the subgrouping variables should be addressed for proper interpretation of forest plots, especially in large effectiveness trials where one of the goals is to address concerns about the generalizability of findings to various populations. Failure to account for the correlation between the subgrouping variables can result in misleading (confounded) interpretations of subgroup effects. Here we present an approach called standardization, a commonly used technique in epidemiology, that allows for valid comparison of subgroup effects depicted in a forest plot. We present simulations results and a subgroup analysis from parallel-group, placebo-controlled randomized trials of antibiotics for acute otitis media.
Keywords:Confounding  Consistency of treatment effect  Forest plot  Heterogeneity of treatment effects  Interaction  Marginal structural model
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