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Validity of Tests under Covariate‐Adaptive Biased Coin Randomization and Generalized Linear Models
Author(s) -
Shao Jun,
Yu Xinxin
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
biometrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.298
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1541-0420
pISSN - 0006-341X
DOI - 10.1111/biom.12062
Subject(s) - covariate , type i and type ii errors , mathematics , statistics , poisson distribution , randomization , generalized linear model , linear model , statistical hypothesis testing , econometrics , restricted randomization , clinical trial , medicine , pathology
Summary Some covariate‐adaptive randomization methods have been used in clinical trials for a long time, but little theoretical work has been done about testing hypotheses under covariate‐adaptive randomization until Shao et al. (2010) who provided a theory with detailed discussion for responses under linear models. In this article, we establish some asymptotic results for covariate‐adaptive biased coin randomization under generalized linear models with possibly unknown link functions. We show that the simple t ‐test without using any covariate is conservative under covariate‐adaptive biased coin randomization in terms of its Type I error rate, and that a valid test using the bootstrap can be constructed. This bootstrap test, utilizing covariates in the randomization scheme, is shown to be asymptotically as efficient as Wald's test correctly using covariates in the analysis. Thus, the efficiency loss due to not using covariates in the analysis can be recovered by utilizing covariates in covariate‐adaptive biased coin randomization. Our theory is illustrated with two most popular types of discrete outcomes, binary responses and event counts under the Poisson model, and exponentially distributed continuous responses. We also show that an alternative simple test without using any covariate under the Poisson model has an inflated Type I error rate under simple randomization, but is valid under covariate‐adaptive biased coin randomization. Effects on the validity of tests due to model misspecification is also discussed. Simulation studies about the Type I errors and powers of several tests are presented for both discrete and continuous responses.