A case study in comparing therapies involving informative drop-out, non-ignorable non-compliance and repeated measurements

被引:30
|
作者
Härkänen, T
Knekt, P
Virtala, E
Lindfors, O
机构
[1] Natl Publ Hlth Inst, FIN-00300 Helsinki, Finland
[2] Social Insurance Inst, Helsinki, Finland
[3] Biomedicum Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
[4] Univ Helsinki, Cent Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Helsinki, Finland
关键词
clinical trial; repeated measurements; non-ignorable missing data; non-ignorable non-compliance; Bayesian inference;
D O I
10.1002/sim.2409
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Virtually no comparisons of different psychotherapies with long follow-up times have been carried out until now. The Helsinki Psychotherapy Study is a randomized clinical trial, where patients were monitored for 12 months after the onset of study treatments, of which each lasted approximately 6 months. The patients' psychiatric status was measured at five pre-determined time points during the follow-up period. In general, the analyses of trials are complicated in cases where compliance with the given treatment is incomplete or the drop-out from the follow-up is non-ignorable. In the present study, the quality of the treatment deviated from the protocol for some patients and some patients took auxiliary treatments which had similar effects to the study treatment during the study treatment or follow-up period. This might have resulted in standard intention-to-treat analyses providing excessively conservative or liberal conclusions. Non-compliance may have been non-ignorable in some cases, so subjectspecific latent factors may have influenced the outcome both directly and indirectly via compliance behaviour. The most and least healthy patients are the most likely to dropout from the follow-up a priori, so the missing data process is informative. The missing data can partly be augmented with surrogate information collected during interviews with patients who dropped out. A Bayesian hierarchical as-treated model, which uses random-effects-based selection models to account for non-ignorable missing data and non-compliance, was compared with different mixed effects models. Copyright (c) 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:3773 / 3787
页数:15
相关论文
共 41 条
  • [21] Domestic Non-Compliance of the EU Norm: Case Study of the Capital Punishment System in Japan
    Obara, Mika
    JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN RESEARCH, 2013, 9 (01) : 24 - 38
  • [22] Frequency of Medication Non-compliance in Hypertensive Patients Presenting with Stroke: A Case-control Study
    Kumar, Vikash
    Kumari, Barkha
    Rahat, Eiman
    Fareed, Sundus
    CUREUS JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE, 2019, 11 (05)
  • [23] INSIGHT IN NON-PARTICIPATION AND DROP-OUT AMONG CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE PATIENTS IN A PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY - THE THORESCI STUDY
    Kupper, Nina
    van Montfort, Eveline
    Widdershoven, Jos
    Denollet, Johan
    PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 2018, 80 (03): : A102 - A103
  • [24] USE OF BEHAVIOR-MODIFICATION TECHNIQUES FOR THE TREATMENT OF HEMODIALYSIS PATIENT NON-COMPLIANCE - CASE-STUDY
    WENEROWICZ, WJ
    JOURNAL OF DIALYSIS, 1979, 3 (01): : 41 - 50
  • [25] Is the instrumental approach a ?silver bullet? for addressing non-compliance in recreational fisheries: A South African case study
    Bova, Christopher S.
    Stephens, Jed
    Aswani, Shankar
    Potts, Warren M.
    FISHERIES RESEARCH, 2022, 255
  • [26] Forensic-metrological considerations on assessment of compliance (or non-compliance) in forensic blood alcohol content determinations: A case study with software application
    Zamengo, Luca
    Frison, Giampietro
    Tedeschi, Gianpaola
    Frasson, Samuela
    FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2016, 265 : 144 - 152
  • [27] Managing money laundering risks in commercial letters of credit Are banks in danger of non-compliance? A case study of the United Kingdom
    Chhina, Ramandeep Kaur
    JOURNAL OF MONEY LAUNDERING CONTROL, 2016, 19 (02): : 158 - 168
  • [28] Understanding non-compliance to colorectal cancer screening: a case control study, nested in a randomised trial [ISRCTN83029072]
    Paolo Giorgi Rossi
    Antonio Federici
    Francesco Bartolozzi
    Sara Farchi
    Piero Borgia
    Gabriella Guasticchi
    BMC Public Health, 5
  • [29] Understanding non-compliance to colorectal cancer screening: a case control study, nested in a randomised trial [ISRCTN83029072]
    Rossi, PG
    Federici, A
    Bartolozzi, F
    Farchi, S
    Borgia, P
    Guasticchi, G
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2005, 5 (1) : 10P
  • [30] IMPACT OF NON-RANDOMISED DROP-OUT ON TREATMENT SWITCHING ADJUSTMENT IN THE RELAPSING-REMITTING MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS CLARITY TRIAL AND THE CLARITY EXTENSION STUDY
    Gorrod, Bell H.
    Latimer, N.
    Damian, D.
    Hettle, R.
    Harty, G. T.
    Wong, S. L.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2017, 20 (09) : A769 - A769