Statistical power considerations in genotype-based recall randomized controlled trials.

Sci Rep

Department of Clinical Sciences, Genetic and Molecular Epidemiology Unit, Lund University, Malmö, SE-205 02, Sweden.

Published: November 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) often lack sufficient power to confirm interactions between genes and treatments, prompting the exploration of genotype-based recall (GBR) trials.
  • Using data from the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), researchers assessed the statistical power of these designs by calculating necessary sample sizes and power estimates for gene-drug interactions, focusing on metformin and the rs8065082 SLC47A1 gene variant.
  • The findings indicated that GBR trials generally have a significantly higher power to detect these interactions compared to conventional RCTs, highlighting their growing popularity and the need to consider both their advantages and limitations.

Article Abstract

Randomized controlled trials (RCT) are often underpowered for validating gene-treatment interactions. Using published data from the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), we examined power in conventional and genotype-based recall (GBR) trials. We calculated sample size and statistical power for gene-metformin interactions (vs. placebo) using incidence rates, gene-drug interaction effect estimates and allele frequencies reported in the DPP for the rs8065082 SLC47A1 variant, a metformin transported encoding locus. We then calculated statistical power for interactions between genetic risk scores (GRS), metformin treatment and intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) given a range of sampling frames, clinical trial sample sizes, interaction effect estimates, and allele frequencies; outcomes were type 2 diabetes incidence (time-to-event) and change in small LDL particles (continuous outcome). Thereafter, we compared two recruitment frameworks: GBR (participants recruited from the extremes of a GRS distribution) and conventional sampling (participants recruited without explicit emphasis on genetic characteristics). We further examined the influence of outcome measurement error on statistical power. Under most simulated scenarios, GBR trials have substantially higher power to observe gene-drug and gene-lifestyle interactions than same-sized conventional RCTs. GBR trials are becoming popular for validation of gene-treatment interactions; our analyses illustrate the strengths and weaknesses of this design.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5122840PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep37307DOI Listing

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