Randomization Inference and Principal Stratification in HIV Prevention Studies
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Nolen, Tracy Lynn. Randomization Inference and Principal Stratification In Hiv Prevention Studies. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2012. https://doi.org/10.17615/g4wd-fb92APA
Nolen, T. (2012). Randomization Inference and Principal Stratification in HIV Prevention Studies. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. https://doi.org/10.17615/g4wd-fb92Chicago
Nolen, Tracy Lynn. 2012. Randomization Inference and Principal Stratification In Hiv Prevention Studies. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. https://doi.org/10.17615/g4wd-fb92- Last Modified
- March 19, 2019
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Nolen, Tracy Lynn
- Affiliation: Gillings School of Global Public Health, Department of Biostatistics
- Abstract
- Infectious disease prevention studies often aim to test or estimate the causal effect of a preventive measure on outcomes by comparing the potential outcomes individuals would have under treatment versus control. Examples of outcomes of interest include infection incidence or post-infection outcomes (e.g., disease severity, death). Two analytical challenges of interest exist for these studies. First, analyses on post-infection outcomes are subject to selection bias as only a subset of the randomized population become infected (i.e., infection status is a post-randomization measure on which analyses are often conditioned). Treatment comparisons conditional on post-randomization measures using standard analytic methods do not have a causal interpretation in that the estimates obtained are not unbiased estimates of the contrast between potential outcomes. The principal stratification framework provides estimates of treatment causal effect in the presence of potential selection bias due to post-randomization measures; however, existing methods comprise only Bayesian or large-sample frequentist approaches. To date a general approach to randomization inference within principal strata has not been developed. Furthermore, while principal stratification approaches are abundant in statistical literature, their presence as an applied analytic approach within infectious disease journals is limited. The second challenge of prevention studies involves the analysis of repeated low-dose mucosal challenge preclinical studies of potential vaccines which are becoming more prevalent in an attempt to conduct studies that better mirror 'real life' human transmission. Current statistical literature exploring the analysis of these studies is somewhat limited and simulation results for certain proposed analytic approaches have demonstrated an inflated type I error. Therefore, in this dissertation we 1) develop methods for exact randomization-based causal inference within principal strata in the presence selection bias due to post-randomization measures, 2) present a discussion of selection bias in randomized studies and the use of principal stratification analytic approaches for handling such bias targeted at subject-matter investigators and 3) present a discussion of appropriate analytic approaches for repeated low-dose challenge preclinical vaccine studies.
- Date of publication
- May 2012
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- In Copyright
- Advisor
- Hudgens, Michael
- Degree
- Doctor of Public Health
- Graduation year
- 2012
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