Informative noncompliance in endpoint trials

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Abstract

Noncompliance with study medications is an important issue in the design of endpoint clinical trials. Including noncompliant patient data in an intention-to-treat analysis could seriously decrease study power. Standard methods for calculating sample size account for noncompliance, but all assume that noncompliance is noninformative, i.e., that the risk of discontinuation is independent of the risk of experiencing a study endpoint. Using data from several published clinical trials (OPTIMAAL, LIFE, RENAAL, SOLVD-Prevention and SOLVD-Treatment), we demonstrate that this assumption is often untrue, and we discuss the effect of informative noncompliance on power and sample size. © 2004 Snapinn et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Snapinn, S. M., Jiang, Q., & Iglewicz, B. (2004, July 3). Informative noncompliance in endpoint trials. Current Controlled Trials in Cardiovascular Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1186/1468-6708-5-5

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