Analysis of Time-to-event Data with Incomplete Event Adjudication
Tom Cook
Division of Biostatistics
University of Wisconsin- Madison
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
3:30pm
MoosT 1-450G
Minneapolis Campus
Abstract:
In many multicenter, randomized clinical trials, the primary outcome is the time to the first of a number of possible clinical events. An event classification committee may be convened to determine whether events which have been reported by investigators meet the predetermined criteria for primary endpoint events. When interim analyses are performed in such trials, the final classification for many reported events will not be known. Failure to account for the uncertain status of these events may result in incorrect interim analysis. The probability that an unadjudicated event will be confirmed as a primary event can typically be estimated from those events for which adjudication is complete. We show that if each unadjudicated event is weighted according to the probability that it will be the first primary event, consistent estimates of survival probabilities and regression parameters, and unbiased logrank tests of treatment differences can be performed. Moderate sample consistency of point estimates and variance estimates is verified by simulation.
A social tea will be held at 3:00 P.M. in A434 Mayo. All are Welcome.
For more details contact 612-624-4655 or see http://www.biostat.umn.edu/seminar_academic.html