Exploratory subgroup analyses in clinical research /

"A few years ago I started a book by first writing a fairly extensive preface. I never finished that book and resolved that in the future I would write first the book and then the preface. Leo Breiman (1928-2005) -Preface to "Probability" (Breiman, 1968) When I eventually agreed to wr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rosenkranz, Gerd, 1955- (Author)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, 2020.
Subjects:
Online Access: Full text (MFA users only)
ISBN:9781119537007
1119537002
9781119536956
1119536952
9781119536734
1119536731
Local Note:ProQuest Ebook Central
Description
Summary:"A few years ago I started a book by first writing a fairly extensive preface. I never finished that book and resolved that in the future I would write first the book and then the preface. Leo Breiman (1928-2005) -Preface to "Probability" (Breiman, 1968) When I eventually agreed to write a book on subgroup analyses I remembered the first paragraph of the preface that the late (and great) probabilist and statistician Leo Breiman added to his book "Probability," a classic textbook during my study days. I interpreted Leo's words as a warning to all potential authors not to start from the wrong end. Hence I postponed writing this part of the book if not to the very end but to the point when progress looked encouraging. This book is about a topic of intense research driven on one hand by the promises of precision medicine and on the other by the intention of regulating agencies to obtain information about the consistency of findings from clinical trials in drug applications. It can therefore be at best a snapshot of the state of the art at a given point in time from the author's perspective of the topic. To whom may the book concern? First, its main parts require a solid knowledge of statistical concepts like random variables, bias, variance, confidence intervals, and statistical tests, but also a background in statistical modeling, re-sampling, and model selection. Re-sampling iswell presented in "An Introduction to the Bootstrap" (Efron and Tibshirani, 1993) while "Statistical Learning with Sparsity" (Hastie et al., 2015) covers the modern aspects of modeling and model selection. On the practical side, knowledge about concepts of clinical trials and drug development like efficacy and safety, and randomization and blinding are helpful. "Statistical Issues in Drug Development" (Senn, 2007) covers many of these topics. Notwithstanding what is said above, parts of the book should be readable by a non-statistical audience, mainly the chapters on history and to a lesser extent on pitfalls. Chapters digging a bit deeper into methodology (those coming with a heavier load of equations) should be primarily appreciated by statisticians. With this in mind, clinicians and statisticians from the area of clinical development and regulation should benefit most, although the topic of subgroup analysis has a much wider scope"--
Physical Description:1 online resource.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Series:Statistics in practice.
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