TY - JOUR
T1 - Testing the equality of two proportions for combined unilateral and bilateral data
AU - Pei, Yanbo
AU - Tang, Man Lai
AU - Guo, Jianhua
N1 - Funding Information:
The research of M. L. Tang was fully supported by a grant (HKBU261007) from the Research Grant Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. The research of J. Guo was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Numbers 10431010 and 1701022), National 973 Key Project of China (2007CB311002), and NCET-04-0310.
PY - 2008/9
Y1 - 2008/9
N2 - In many medical comparative studies (e.g., comparison of two treatments in an otolaryngological study), subjects may produce either bilateral (e.g., responses from a pair of ears) or unilateral (response from only one ear) data. For bilateral cases, it is meaningful to assume that the information between the two ears from the same subject are generally highly correlated. In this article, we would like to test the equality of the successful cure rates between two treatments with the presence of combined unilateral and bilateral data. Based on the dependence and independence models, we study ten test statistics which utilize both the unilateral and bilateral data. The performance of these statistics will be evaluated with respect to their empirical Type I error rates and powers under different configurations. We find that both Rosner's and Wald-type statistics based on the dependence model and constrained maximum likelihood estimates (under the null hypothesis) perform satisfactorily for small to large samples and are hence recommended. We illustrate our methodologies with a real data set from an otolaryngology study.
AB - In many medical comparative studies (e.g., comparison of two treatments in an otolaryngological study), subjects may produce either bilateral (e.g., responses from a pair of ears) or unilateral (response from only one ear) data. For bilateral cases, it is meaningful to assume that the information between the two ears from the same subject are generally highly correlated. In this article, we would like to test the equality of the successful cure rates between two treatments with the presence of combined unilateral and bilateral data. Based on the dependence and independence models, we study ten test statistics which utilize both the unilateral and bilateral data. The performance of these statistics will be evaluated with respect to their empirical Type I error rates and powers under different configurations. We find that both Rosner's and Wald-type statistics based on the dependence model and constrained maximum likelihood estimates (under the null hypothesis) perform satisfactorily for small to large samples and are hence recommended. We illustrate our methodologies with a real data set from an otolaryngology study.
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U2 - 10.1080/03610910802140232
DO - 10.1080/03610910802140232
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:52649173761
SN - 0361-0918
VL - 37
SP - 1515
EP - 1529
JO - Communications in Statistics: Simulation and Computation
JF - Communications in Statistics: Simulation and Computation
IS - 8
ER -