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Incorporating participants' welfare into sequential multiple assignment randomized trials.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Wang, X; Deliu, N; Narita, Y; Chakraborty, B
Published in: Biometrics
January 29, 2024

Dynamic treatment regimes (DTRs) are sequences of decision rules that recommend treatments based on patients' time-varying clinical conditions. The sequential, multiple assignment, randomized trial (SMART) is an experimental design that can provide high-quality evidence for constructing optimal DTRs. In a conventional SMART, participants are randomized to available treatments at multiple stages with balanced randomization probabilities. Despite its relative simplicity of implementation and desirable performance in comparing embedded DTRs, the conventional SMART faces inevitable ethical issues, including assigning many participants to the empirically inferior treatment or the treatment they dislike, which might slow down the recruitment procedure and lead to higher attrition rates, ultimately leading to poor internal and external validities of the trial results. In this context, we propose a SMART under the Experiment-as-Market framework (SMART-EXAM), a novel SMART design that holds the potential to improve participants' welfare by incorporating their preferences and predicted treatment effects into the randomization procedure. We describe the steps of conducting a SMART-EXAM and evaluate its performance compared to the conventional SMART. The results indicate that the SMART-EXAM can improve the welfare of the participants enrolled in the trial, while also achieving a desirable ability to construct an optimal DTR when the experimental parameters are suitably specified. We finally illustrate the practical potential of the SMART-EXAM design using data from a SMART for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Biometrics

DOI

EISSN

1541-0420

Publication Date

January 29, 2024

Volume

80

Issue

1

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • Statistics & Probability
  • Research Design
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
  • Humans
  • Child
  • 4905 Statistics
  • 0199 Other Mathematical Sciences
  • 0104 Statistics
 

Citation

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ICMJE
MLA
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Wang, X., Deliu, N., Narita, Y., & Chakraborty, B. (2024). Incorporating participants' welfare into sequential multiple assignment randomized trials. Biometrics, 80(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/biomtc/ujad004
Wang, Xinru, Nina Deliu, Yusuke Narita, and Bibhas Chakraborty. “Incorporating participants' welfare into sequential multiple assignment randomized trials.Biometrics 80, no. 1 (January 29, 2024). https://doi.org/10.1093/biomtc/ujad004.
Wang X, Deliu N, Narita Y, Chakraborty B. Incorporating participants' welfare into sequential multiple assignment randomized trials. Biometrics. 2024 Jan 29;80(1).
Wang, Xinru, et al. “Incorporating participants' welfare into sequential multiple assignment randomized trials.Biometrics, vol. 80, no. 1, Jan. 2024. Pubmed, doi:10.1093/biomtc/ujad004.
Wang X, Deliu N, Narita Y, Chakraborty B. Incorporating participants' welfare into sequential multiple assignment randomized trials. Biometrics. 2024 Jan 29;80(1).
Journal cover image

Published In

Biometrics

DOI

EISSN

1541-0420

Publication Date

January 29, 2024

Volume

80

Issue

1

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • Statistics & Probability
  • Research Design
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
  • Humans
  • Child
  • 4905 Statistics
  • 0199 Other Mathematical Sciences
  • 0104 Statistics