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Articles

Robust designs in longitudinal studies accounting for parameter and model uncertainties – application to count data

ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 31-45 | Received 17 May 2018, Accepted 18 Mar 2019, Published online: 27 Apr 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Nonlinear mixed effect models (NLMEMs) are widely used for the analysis of longitudinal data. To design these studies, optimal designs based on the expected Fisher information matrix (FIM) can be used. A method evaluating the FIM using Monte-Carlo Hamiltonian Monte-Carlo (MC-HMC) has been proposed and implemented in the R package MIXFIM using Stan. This approach, however, requires a priori knowledge of models and parameters, which leads to locally optimal designs. The objective of this work was to extend this MC-HMC-based method to evaluate the FIM in NLMEMs accounting for uncertainty in parameters and in models. When introducing uncertainty in the population parameters, we evaluated the robust FIM as the expectation of the FIM computed by MC-HMC over the distribution of these parameters. Then, the compound D-optimality criterion (CD optimality), corresponding to a weighted product of the D-optimality criteria of several candidate models, was used to find a common CD-optimal design for the set of candidate models. Finally, a compound DE-criterion (CDE optimality), corresponding to a weighted product of the normalized determinants of the robust FIMs of all the candidate models accounting for uncertainty in parameters, was calculated to find the CDE-optimal design which was robust on both parameters and model. These methods were applied in a longitudinal Poisson count model. We assumed prior distributions on the population parameters, as well as several candidate models describing the relationship between the logarithm of the event rate parameter and the dose. We found that assuming uncertainty in parameters could lead to different optimal designs, and misspecification of models could induce designs with low efficiencies. The CD- or CDE-optimal designs therefore provided a good compromise for different candidate models. Finally, the proposed approach allows for the first time optimization of designs for repeated discrete data accounting for parameter and model uncertainties.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the European Union 7th Framework Programme under Grant Agreement n602552. The authors gratefully acknowledge François Cohen and Hervé Le Nagard for their valuable and indispensable help with CATBioMed cluster.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the European Union 7th Framework Programme [602552].

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