作者
Martijn J Schuemie, Patrick B Ryan, William DuMouchel, Marc A Suchard, David Madigan
发表日期
2014/1/30
期刊
Statistics in medicine
卷号
33
期号
2
页码范围
209-218
简介
Often the literature makes assertions of medical product effects on the basis of ‘ p < 0.05’. The underlying premise is that at this threshold, there is only a 5% probability that the observed effect would be seen by chance when in reality there is no effect. In observational studies, much more than in randomized trials, bias and confounding may undermine this premise. To test this premise, we selected three exemplar drug safety studies from literature, representing a case–control, a cohort, and a self‐controlled case series design. We attempted to replicate these studies as best we could for the drugs studied in the original articles. Next, we applied the same three designs to sets of negative controls: drugs that are not believed to cause the outcome of interest. We observed how often p < 0.05 when the null hypothesis is true, and we fitted distributions to the effect estimates. Using these distributions, we compute …
引用总数
201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024448191915182629243417
学术搜索中的文章