Semiparametric Weighted Spline Regression (SWSR) in Confirmatory Clinical Trials with Time-Varying Placebo Effects
Tianyu Zhan, Yihua Gu

TL;DR
This paper introduces SWSR, a semiparametric spline regression method designed to accurately estimate treatment effects in clinical trials with time-varying placebo effects, ensuring error control and high power.
Contribution
The paper develops a novel semiparametric weighted spline regression approach to handle unknown temporal placebo effects in clinical trials, improving error control and robustness.
Findings
SWSR effectively controls type I error in simulations.
SWSR demonstrates high power in detecting treatment effects.
Case study confirms practical applicability of SWSR.
Abstract
In confirmatory Phase 3 clinical trials with recruitment over the years, the underlying placebo effect may follow an unknown temporal trend. Taking a clinical trial on Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS) as an example, fluctuations or variabilities are common in HS-related endpoints, mainly due to the natural disease characteristics, variations of evaluation from different physicians, and standard of care evolvement. The adjustment of time-varying placebo effects receives some attention in adaptive clinical trials and platform trials, but is usually ignored in traditional non-adaptive designs. However, under the impact of such a time drift, some existing methods may not simultaneously control the type I error rate and achieve satisfactory power. In this article, we propose SWSR (Semiparametric Weighted Spline Regression) to estimate the treatment effect with B-splines to accommodate the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsHidradenitis Suppurativa and Treatments · Statistical Methods in Clinical Trials · Pharmacovigilance and Adverse Drug Reactions
