Title of article :
Maximin Efficiencies under Treatment-Dependent Costs and Outcome Variances for Parallel, AA/BB, and AB/BA Designs
Author/Authors :
Candel, Math J. J. M Department Methodology and Statistics - CAPHRI Care and Public Health Research Institute - Maastricht University - Maastricht, Netherlands
Abstract :
If there are no carryover effects, AB/BA crossover designs are more efficient than parallel (A/B) and extended parallel (AA/BB)
group designs. &is study extends these results in that (a) optimal instead of equal treatment allocation is examined, (b) allowance
for treatment-dependent outcome variances is made, and (c) next to treatment effects, also treatment by period interaction effects
are examined. Starting from a linear mixed model analysis, the optimal allocation requires knowledge on intraclass correlations in
A and B, which typically is rather vague. To solve this, maximin versions of the designs are derived, which guarantee a power level
across plausible ranges of the intraclass correlations at the lowest research costs. For the treatment effect, an extensive numerical
evaluation shows that if the treatment costs of A and B are equal, or if the sum of the costs of one treatment and measurement per
person is less than the remaining subject-specific costs (e.g., recruitment costs), the maximin crossover design is most efficient for
ranges of intraclass correlations starting at 0.15 or higher. For other cost scenarios, the maximin parallel or extended parallel
design can also become most efficient. For the treatment by period interaction, the maximin AA/BB design can be proven to be the
most efficient. A simulation study supports these asymptotic results for small samples.
Keywords :
AA/BB , AB/BA , Treatment-Dependent , Parallel