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A general method for elicitation,imputation, and sensitivity analysis for incomplete repeated binary data
Authors:Daniel Tompsett  Stephen Sutton  Shaun R. Seaman  Ian R. White
Affiliation:1. Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, UCL, London, UK;2. Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK;3. MRC Biostatistics Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK;4. MRC Clinical Trials Unit, UCL, London, UK
Abstract:We develop and demonstrate methods to perform sensitivity analyses to assess sensitivity to plausible departures from missing at random in incomplete repeated binary outcome data. We use multiple imputation in the not at random fully conditional specification framework, which includes one or more sensitivity parameters (SPs) for each incomplete variable. The use of an online elicitation questionnaire is demonstrated to obtain expert opinion on the SPs, and highest prior density regions are used alongside opinion pooling methods to display credible regions for SPs. We demonstrate that substantive conclusions can be far more sensitive to departures from the missing at random assumption (MAR) when control and intervention nonresponders depart from MAR differently, and show that the correlation of arm specific SPs in expert opinion is particularly important. We illustrate these methods on the iQuit in Practice smoking cessation trial, which compared the impact of a tailored text messaging system versus standard care on smoking cessation. We show that conclusions about the effect of intervention on smoking cessation outcomes at 8 week and 6 months are broadly insensitive to departures from MAR, with conclusions significantly affected only when the differences in behavior between the nonresponders in the two trial arms is larger than expert opinion judges to be realistic.
Keywords:expert elicitation  MAR  MNAR  multiple imputation  smoking cessation
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