Literature DB >> 28639426

Equal-tailed confidence intervals for comparison of rates.

Peter J Laud1.   

Abstract

Several methods are available for generating confidence intervals for rate difference, rate ratio, or odds ratio, when comparing two independent binomial proportions or Poisson (exposure-adjusted) incidence rates. Most methods have some degree of systematic bias in one-sided coverage, so that a nominal 95% two-sided interval cannot be assumed to have tail probabilities of 2.5% at each end, and any associated hypothesis test is at risk of inflated type I error rate. Skewness-corrected asymptotic score methods have been shown to have superior equal-tailed coverage properties for the binomial case. This paper completes this class of methods by introducing novel skewness corrections for the Poisson case and for odds ratio, with and without stratification. Graphical methods are used to compare the performance of these intervals against selected alternatives. The skewness-corrected methods perform favourably in all situations-including those with small sample sizes or rare events-and the skewness correction should be considered essential for analysis of rate ratios. The stratified method is found to have excellent coverage properties for a fixed effects analysis. In addition, another new stratified score method is proposed, based on the t-distribution, which is suitable for use in either a fixed effects or random effects analysis. By using a novel weighting scheme, this approach improves on conventional and modern meta-analysis methods with weights that rely on crude estimation of stratum variances. In summary, this paper describes methods that are found to be robust for a wide range of applications in the analysis of rates.
Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Poisson rates; binomial proportions; confidence interval; difference or ratio; meta-analysis; stratified

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28639426     DOI: 10.1002/pst.1813

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharm Stat        ISSN: 1539-1604            Impact factor:   1.894


  3 in total

1.  Trends in kidney function testing in UK primary care since the introduction of the quality and outcomes framework: a retrospective cohort study using CPRD.

Authors:  Benjamin Feakins; Jason Oke; Emily McFadden; Jeffrey Aronson; Daniel Lasserson; Christopher O'Callaghan; Clare Taylor; Nathan Hill; Richard Stevens; Rafael Perera
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-06-12       Impact factor: 2.692

2.  Randomized controlled trial transfusing convalescent plasma as post-exposure prophylaxis against SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Authors:  Shmuel Shoham; Evan M Bloch; Arturo Casadevall; Daniel Hanley; Bryan Lau; Kelly Gebo; Edward Cachay; Seble G Kassaye; James H Paxton; Jonathan Gerber; Adam C Levine; Judith Currier; Bela Patel; Elizabeth S Allen; Shweta Anjan; Lawrence Appel; Sheriza Baksh; Paul W Blair; Anthony Bowen; Patrick Broderick; Christopher A Caputo; Valerie Cluzet; Marie Elena Cordisco; Daniel Cruser; Stephan Ehrhardt; Donald Forthal; Yuriko Fukuta; Amy L Gawad; Thomas Gniadek; Jean Hammel; Moises A Huaman; Douglas A Jabs; Anne Jedlicka; Nicky Karlen; Sabra Klein; Oliver Laeyendecker; Karen Lane; Nichol McBee; Barry Meisenberg; Christian Merlo; Giselle Mosnaim; Han-Sol Park; Andrew Pekosz; Joann Petrini; William Rausch; David M Shade; Janna R Shapiro; J Robinson Singleton; Catherine Sutcliffe; David L Thomas; Anusha Yarava; Martin Zand; Jonathan M Zenilman; Aaron A R Tobian; David Sullivan
Journal:  medRxiv       Date:  2021-12-14

3.  Socioenvironmental criteria and postoperative complications in ambulatory surgery in a French university hospital: a prospective cross-sectional observational study.

Authors:  Sorina-Dana Mihailescu; Isabelle Maréchal; Denis Thillard; André Gillibert; Vincent Compère
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-11-27       Impact factor: 2.692

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.