From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Implicit in the growing interest in patient-centered outcomes research is a growing need for better evidence regarding how responses to a given intervention or treatment may vary across patients, referred to as heterogeneity of treatment effect (HTE). A variety o...

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Main Authors: Willke Richard J, Zheng Zhiyuan, Subedi Prasun, Althin Rikard, Mullins C Daniel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-12-01
Series:BMC Medical Research Methodology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/12/185
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spelling doaj-f421d3e1af1b4e9b86dd4149b79894e32020-11-25T01:01:15ZengBMCBMC Medical Research Methodology1471-22882012-12-0112118510.1186/1471-2288-12-185From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primerWillke Richard JZheng ZhiyuanSubedi PrasunAlthin RikardMullins C Daniel<p>Abstract</p> <p>Implicit in the growing interest in patient-centered outcomes research is a growing need for better evidence regarding how responses to a given intervention or treatment may vary across patients, referred to as heterogeneity of treatment effect (HTE). A variety of methods are available for exploring HTE, each associated with unique strengths and limitations. This paper reviews a selected set of methodological approaches to understanding HTE, focusing largely but not exclusively on their uses with randomized trial data. It is oriented for the “intermediate” outcomes researcher, who may already be familiar with some methods, but would value a systematic overview of both more and less familiar methods with attention to when and why they may be used. Drawing from the biomedical, statistical, epidemiological and econometrics literature, we describe the steps involved in choosing an HTE approach, focusing on whether the intent of the analysis is for exploratory, initial testing, or confirmatory testing purposes. We also map HTE methodological approaches to data considerations as well as the strengths and limitations of each approach. Methods reviewed include formal subgroup analysis, meta-analysis and meta-regression, various types of predictive risk modeling including classification and regression tree analysis, series of n-of-1 trials, latent growth and growth mixture models, quantile regression, and selected non-parametric methods. In addition to an overview of each HTE method, examples and references are provided for further reading.</p> <p>By guiding the selection of the methods and analysis, this review is meant to better enable outcomes researchers to understand and explore aspects of HTE in the context of patient-centered outcomes research.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/12/185HeterogeneityRisk adjustmentEstimation techniquesComparative effectiveness research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Willke Richard J
Zheng Zhiyuan
Subedi Prasun
Althin Rikard
Mullins C Daniel
spellingShingle Willke Richard J
Zheng Zhiyuan
Subedi Prasun
Althin Rikard
Mullins C Daniel
From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer
BMC Medical Research Methodology
Heterogeneity
Risk adjustment
Estimation techniques
Comparative effectiveness research
author_facet Willke Richard J
Zheng Zhiyuan
Subedi Prasun
Althin Rikard
Mullins C Daniel
author_sort Willke Richard J
title From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer
title_short From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer
title_full From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer
title_fullStr From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer
title_full_unstemmed From concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer
title_sort from concepts, theory, and evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects to methodological approaches: a primer
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Research Methodology
issn 1471-2288
publishDate 2012-12-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Implicit in the growing interest in patient-centered outcomes research is a growing need for better evidence regarding how responses to a given intervention or treatment may vary across patients, referred to as heterogeneity of treatment effect (HTE). A variety of methods are available for exploring HTE, each associated with unique strengths and limitations. This paper reviews a selected set of methodological approaches to understanding HTE, focusing largely but not exclusively on their uses with randomized trial data. It is oriented for the “intermediate” outcomes researcher, who may already be familiar with some methods, but would value a systematic overview of both more and less familiar methods with attention to when and why they may be used. Drawing from the biomedical, statistical, epidemiological and econometrics literature, we describe the steps involved in choosing an HTE approach, focusing on whether the intent of the analysis is for exploratory, initial testing, or confirmatory testing purposes. We also map HTE methodological approaches to data considerations as well as the strengths and limitations of each approach. Methods reviewed include formal subgroup analysis, meta-analysis and meta-regression, various types of predictive risk modeling including classification and regression tree analysis, series of n-of-1 trials, latent growth and growth mixture models, quantile regression, and selected non-parametric methods. In addition to an overview of each HTE method, examples and references are provided for further reading.</p> <p>By guiding the selection of the methods and analysis, this review is meant to better enable outcomes researchers to understand and explore aspects of HTE in the context of patient-centered outcomes research.</p>
topic Heterogeneity
Risk adjustment
Estimation techniques
Comparative effectiveness research
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/12/185
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