Methods for Handling Dropouts in Longitudinal Clinical Trials |
| |
Authors: | Garrett M. Fitzmaurice |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health 655 Huntington Avenue, Boston MA 02115, USA |
| |
Abstract: | This paper focuses on the monotone missing data patterns produced by dropouts and presents a review of the statistical literature on approaches for handling dropouts in longitudinal clinical trials. A variety of ad hoc procedures for handling dropouts are widely used. The rationale for many of these procedures is not well-founded and they can result in biased estimates of treatment comparisons. A fundamentally difficult problem arises when the probability of dropout is thought to be related to the specific value that in principle should have been obtained; this is often referred to as informative or non-ignorable dropout. Joint models for the longitudinal outcomes and the dropout times have been proposed in order to make corrections for non-ignorable dropouts. Two broad classes of joint models are reviewed: selection models and pattern-mixture models. Finally, when there are dropouts in a longitudinal clinical trial the goals of the analysis need to be clearly specified. In this paper we review the main distinctions between a 'pragmatic' and an 'explanatory' analysis. We note that many of the procedures for handling dropouts that are widely used in practice come closest to producing an explanatory rather than a pragmatic analysis. |
| |
Keywords: | dropouts explanatory analysis intention-to-treat missing data pragmatic analysis repeated measures |
|
|