Evaluating Bayesian adaptive randomization procedures with adaptive clip methods for multi-arm trials

Author:

May Lee Kim1ORCID,Lee J Jack2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MRC Biostatistics Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

2. University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA

Abstract

Bayesian adaptive randomization is a heuristic approach that aims to randomize more patients to the putatively superior arms based on the trend of the accrued data in a trial. Many statistical aspects of this approach have been explored and compared with other approaches; yet only a limited number of works has focused on improving its performance and providing guidance on its application to real trials. An undesirable property of this approach is that the procedure would randomize patients to an inferior arm in some circumstances, which has raised concerns in its application. Here, we propose an adaptive clip method to rectify the problem by incorporating a data-driven function to be used in conjunction with Bayesian adaptive randomization procedure. This function aims to minimize the chance of assigning patients to inferior arms during the early time of the trial. Moreover, we propose a utility approach to facilitate the selection of a randomization procedure. A cost that reflects the penalty of assigning patients to the inferior arm(s) in the trial is incorporated into our utility function along with all patients benefited from the trial, both within and beyond the trial. We illustrate the selection strategy for a wide range of scenarios.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Medical Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Statistics and Probability,Epidemiology

Reference38 articles.

1. Robertson DS, Lee KM, Lopez-Kolkovska BC, et al. Response-adaptive randomization in clinical trials: from myths to practical considerations. ArXiv ID:2005.00564, http://arxiv.org/abs/2005.00564 (accessed 17 February 2021).

2. ON THE LIKELIHOOD THAT ONE UNKNOWN PROBABILITY EXCEEDS ANOTHER IN VIEW OF THE EVIDENCE OF TWO SAMPLES

3. Practical Bayesian adaptive randomisation in clinical trials

4. A simulation study of outcome adaptive randomization in multi-arm clinical trials

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