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In behavioral medicine trials, such as smoking cessation trials, 2 or more active treatments are often compared. Noncompliance by some subjects with their assigned treatment poses a challenge to the data analyst. The principal stratification framework permits inference about causal effects among subpopulations characterized by potential compliance. However, in the absence of prior information, there are 2 significant limitations: (1) the causal effects cannot be point identified for some strata and (2) individuals in the subpopulations (strata) cannot be identified. We propose to use additional information-compliance-predictive covariates-to help identify the causal effects and to help describe characteristics of the subpopulations. The probability of membership in each principal stratum is modeled as a function of these covariates. The model is constructed using marginal compliance models (which are identified) and a sensitivity parameter that captures the association between the 2 marginal distributions. We illustrate our methods in both a simulation study and an analysis of data from a smoking cessation trial.
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Jason Roy
Joseph W. Hogan
Bess H. Marcus
Biostatistics
Brown University
Miriam Hospital
Geisinger Health System
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Roy et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a110b43e2199439c8f3336e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/biostatistics/kxm027
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