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This book illustrates numerous statistical practices that are
commonly used by medical researchers, but which have severe flaws
that may not be obvious. For each example, it provides one or more
alternative statistical methods that avoid misleading or incorrect
inferences being made. The technical level is kept to a minimum to
make the book accessible to non-statisticians. At the same time,
since many of the examples describe methods used routinely by
medical statisticians with formal statistical training, the book
appeals to a broad readership in the medical research community.
Clinical trials have two purposes -- to treat the patients in the
trial, and to obtain information which increases our understanding
of the disease and especially how patients respond to treatment.
Statistical design provides a means to achieve both these aims,
while statistical data analysis provides methods for extracting
useful information from the trial data. Recent advances in
statistical computing have enabled statisticians to implement very
rapidly a broad array of methods which previously were either
impractical or impossible. Biostatisticians are now able to provide
much greater support to medical researchers working in both
clinical and laboratory settings. As our collective toolkit of
techniques for analyzing data has grown, it has become increasingly
difficult for biostatisticians to keep up with all the developments
in our own field. Recent Advances in Clinical Trial Design and
Analysis brings together biostatisticians doing cutting-edge
research and explains some of the more recent developments in
biostatistics to clinicians and scientists who work in clinical
trials.
Reliably optimizing a new treatment in humans is a critical first
step in clinical evaluation since choosing a suboptimal dose or
schedule may lead to failure in later trials. At the same time, if
promising preclinical results do not translate into a real
treatment advance, it is important to determine this quickly and
terminate the clinical evaluation process to avoid wasting
resources. Bayesian Designs for Phase I-II Clinical Trials
describes how phase I-II designs can serve as a bridge or
protective barrier between preclinical studies and large
confirmatory clinical trials. It illustrates many of the severe
drawbacks with conventional methods used for early-phase clinical
trials and presents numerous Bayesian designs for human clinical
trials of new experimental treatment regimes. Written by research
leaders from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,
this book shows how Bayesian designs for early-phase clinical
trials can explore, refine, and optimize new experimental
treatments. It emphasizes the importance of basing decisions on
both efficacy and toxicity.
This book illustrates numerous statistical practices that are
commonly used by medical researchers, but which have severe flaws
that may not be obvious. For each example, it provides one or more
alternative statistical methods that avoid misleading or incorrect
inferences being made. The technical level is kept to a minimum to
make the book accessible to non-statisticians. At the same time,
since many of the examples describe methods used routinely by
medical statisticians with formal statistical training, the book
appeals to a broad readership in the medical research community.
Clinical trials have two purposes -- to treat the patients in the
trial, and to obtain information which increases our understanding
of the disease and especially how patients respond to treatment.
Statistical design provides a means to achieve both these aims,
while statistical data analysis provides methods for extracting
useful information from the trial data. Recent advances in
statistical computing have enabled statisticians to implement very
rapidly a broad array of methods which previously were either
impractical or impossible. Biostatisticians are now able to provide
much greater support to medical researchers working in both
clinical and laboratory settings. As our collective toolkit of
techniques for analyzing data has grown, it has become increasingly
difficult for biostatisticians to keep up with all the developments
in our own field. Recent Advances in Clinical Trial Design and
Analysis brings together biostatisticians doing cutting-edge
research and explains some of the more recent developments in
biostatistics to clinicians and scientists who work in clinical
trials.
This book illustrates numerous statistical practices that are
commonly used by medical researchers, but which have severe flaws
that may not be obvious. For each example, it provides one or more
alternative statistical methods that avoid misleading or incorrect
inferences being made. The technical level is kept to a minimum to
make the book accessible to non-statisticians. At the same time,
since many of the examples describe methods used routinely by
medical statisticians with formal statistical training, the book
appeals to a broad readership in the medical research community.
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