Sample size and power issues in estimating incremental cost-effectiveness ratios from clinical trials data

被引:2
|
作者
Willan, AR
O'Brien, BJ
机构
[1] St Josephs Hosp, Ctr Evaluat Med, Hamilton, ON L8N 4A6, Canada
[2] McMaster Univ, Dept Clin Epidemiol & Biostat, Hamilton, ON, Canada
关键词
cost-effectiveness; ICER; confidence intervals; sample size; power;
D O I
10.1002/(SICI)1099-1050(199905)8:3<203::AID-HEC413>3.0.CO;2-7
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
It is becoming increasingly more common for a randomized controlled trial of a new therapy to include a prospective economic evaluation. The advantage of such trial-based cost-effectiveness is that conventional principles of statistical inference can be used to quantify uncertainty in the estimate of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). Numerous articles in the recent literature have outlined and compared various approaches for determining confidence intervals for the ICER. In this paper we address the issue of power and sample size in trial-based cost-effectiveness analysis. Our approach is to determine the required sample size to ensure that the resulting confidence interval is narrow enough to distinguish between two regions in the cost-effectiveness plane: one in which the new therapy is considered to be cost-effective and one in which it is not. As a result, for a given sample size, the cost-effectiveness plane is divided into two regions, separated by an ellipse centred at the origin, such that the sample size is adequate only if the truth lies on or outside the ellipse. Copyright (C) 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:203 / 211
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] AN ANALYTICAL METHOD FOR ESTIMATING THE BOUNDARIES OF AN INCREMENTAL COST-EFFECTIVENESS RATIO
    Kamae, I
    Yamabe, K.
    Sugimoto, T.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2014, 17 (03) : A201 - A201
  • [32] Estimating confidence intervals for cost-effectiveness ratios: An example from a randomized trial
    Chaudhary, MA
    Stearns, SC
    STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 1996, 15 (13) : 1447 - 1458
  • [33] Estimating confidence intervals for cost-effectiveness ratios: An example from a randomized trial
    Blomqvist, N
    STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 1998, 17 (04) : 503 - 503
  • [34] Estimation of mean health care costs and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios with possibly censored data
    Chen, Shuai
    Rolfes, Jennifer
    Zhao, Hongwei
    Stata Journal, 2015, 15 (03): : 698 - 711
  • [35] Sample Size Planning in the Design of Two-Level Randomized Cost-Effectiveness Trials
    Li, Wei
    Dong, Nianbo
    Maynard, Rebecca
    Kelcey, Benjamin
    Spybrook, Jessaca
    Xu, Yue
    RESEARCH ON SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE, 2025, 35 (03) : 307 - 320
  • [36] Sample size calculation in cost-effectiveness cluster randomized trials: optimal and maximin approaches
    Abu Manju, Md
    Candel, Math J. J. M.
    Berger, Martijn P. F.
    STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 2014, 33 (15) : 2538 - 2553
  • [37] AFFORDABLE EFFICACY - USING PROJECTED INCREMENTAL COST-EFFECTIVENESS RATIOS FOR CLINICAL-TRIAL PLANNING
    NAYLOR, CD
    BASINSKI, A
    CLINICAL RESEARCH, 1989, 37 (02): : A321 - A321
  • [38] ESTIMATION OF CONFIDENCE-INTERVALS FOR AVERAGE COST-EFFECTIVENESS AND COST-EFFECTIVENESS RATIOS FROM SURVIVAL-DATA
    GARDINER, J
    HOGAN, A
    KUPERSMITH, J
    HOLMESROVNER, M
    ROVNER, D
    GRIFFITH, L
    CLINICAL RESEARCH, 1994, 42 (02): : A224 - A224
  • [39] Analysis, sample size, and fewer for estimating incremental net health benefit from clinical trial data
    Willan, AR
    CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIALS, 2001, 22 (03): : 228 - 237
  • [40] On Cost Effectiveness and Sample Size in Clinical Trials. The Author’s Reply
    Martin E. Backhouse
    PharmacoEconomics, 2004, 22 : 688 - 689