Processing math: 55%

Average Bioequivalence

 

Details and examples of other methods are accessible via the menu bar on top of the page and in the Online manual of all functions.

library(PowerTOST) # attach the library

Defaults

Parameter Argument Purpose Default
α alpha Nominal level of the test 0.05
π targetpower Minimum desired power 0.80
logscale logscale Analysis on log-transformed or original scale? TRUE
θ0 theta0 ‘True’ or assumed deviation of T from R see below
θ1 theta1 Lower BE limit see below
θ2 theta2 Upper BE limit see below
CV CV CV none
design design Planned design "2x2"
method method Algorithm "exact"
robust robust ‘Robust’ evaluation (Senn’s basic estimator) FALSE
print print Show information in the console? TRUE
details details Show details of the sample size search? FALSE
imax imax Maximum number of iterations 100

Defaults depending on the argument logscale:

Parameter Argument logscale = TRUE logscale = FALSE
θ0 theta0 0.95 +0.05
θ1 theta1 0.80 −0.20
θ2 theta2 1.25 +0.20

Arguments targetpower, theta0, theta1, theta2, and CV have to be given as fractions, not in percent.
The CV is generally the within- (intra-) subject coefficient of variation. Only for design = "parallel" it is the total (a.k.a. pooled) CV.1

The terminology of the argument design follows this pattern: treatments x sequences x periods. The conventional TR|RT (a.k.a. AB|BA) design can be abbreviated as "2x2". Some call the "parallel" design a ‘one-sequence’ design. The design "paired" has two periods but no sequences and is the standard design for studying linear pharmacokinetics (where a single dose is followed by multiple doses). A profile in steady state (T) is compared to the one after the single dose (R). Note that the underlying model assumes no period effects.

Implemented exact algorithms are "exact" / "owenq" (Owen’s Q function, default)2 and "mvt" (direct integration of the bivariate non-central t-distribution). Approximations are "noncentral" / "nct" (non-central t-distribution) and "shifted" / "central" (‘shifted’ central t-distribution).

"robust = TRUE" forces the degrees of freedom to n-seq and is used only in higher-order crossover designs. It could be used if the evaluation was done with a mixed-effects model.

With sampleN.TOST(..., print = FALSE) results are provided as a data frame3 with nine columns Design, alpha, CV, theta0, theta1, theta2, Sample size, Achieved power, and Target power.
To access e.g., the sample size use either sampleN.TOST(...)[7] or sampleN.TOST(...)[["Sample size"]]. We suggest to use the latter in scripts for clarity.4

The estimated sample size gives always the total number of subjects (not subject/sequence in crossovers or subjects/group in a parallel design – like in some other software packages).

Sample size

Designs with one (parallel) to four periods (replicates) are supported.

#     design                        name   df
# "parallel"           2 parallel groups  n-2
#      "2x2"               2x2 crossover  n-2
#    "2x2x2"             2x2x2 crossover  n-2
#    "2x2x3"   2x2x3 replicate crossover 2n-3
#    "2x2x4"   2x2x4 replicate crossover 3n-4
#    "2x4x4"   2x4x4 replicate crossover 3n-4
#    "2x3x3"   partial replicate (2x3x3) 2n-3
#    "2x4x2"            Balaam’s (2x4x2)  n-2
#   "2x2x2r" Liu’s 2x2x2 repeated x-over 3n-2
#   "paired"                paired means  n-1

Example 1

Estimate the sample size for assumed intra-subject CV 0.30.

sampleN.TOST(CV = 0.30)
# 
# +++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST +++++++++++
#             Sample size estimation
# -----------------------------------------------
# Study design: 2x2 crossover 
# log-transformed data (multiplicative model)
# 
# alpha = 0.05, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = 0.8 ... 1.25 
# True ratio = 0.95,  CV = 0.3
# 
# Sample size (total)
#  n     power
# 40   0.815845

To get only the sample size:

sampleN.TOST(CV = 0.30, details = FALSE, print = FALSE)[["Sample size"]]
# [1] 40

Note that the sample size is always rounded up to give balanced sequences (here a multiple of two). Since power is higher than our target, likely this was the case here. Let us check that.
Which power will we get with a sample size of 39?

power.TOST(CV = 0.30, n = 39)
# Unbalanced design. n(i)=20/19 assumed.
# [1] 0.8056171

Confirmed that with 39 subjects we will already reach the target power. That means also that one dropout will not compromise power. We could explore that further in a Power Analysis.

Note that sampleN.TOST() is not vectorized. If we are interested in combinations of assumed values:

sampleN.TOST.vectorized <- function(CVs, theta0s, ...) {
  n <- power <- matrix(ncol = length(CVs), nrow = length(theta0s))
  for (i in seq_along(theta0s)) {
    for (j in seq_along(CVs)) {
      tmp         <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CVs[j], theta0 = theta0s[i], ...)
      n[i, j]     <- tmp[["Sample size"]]
      power[i, j] <- tmp[["Achieved power"]]
    }
  }
  DecPlaces <- function(x) match(TRUE, round(x, 1:15) == x)
  fmt.col <- paste0("CV %.",    max(sapply(CVs, FUN = DecPlaces),
                                    na.rm = TRUE), "f")
  fmt.row <- paste0("theta %.", max(sapply(theta0s, FUN = DecPlaces),
                                    na.rm = TRUE), "f")
  colnames(power) <- colnames(n) <- sprintf(fmt.col, CVs)
  rownames(power) <- rownames(n) <- sprintf(fmt.row, theta0s)
  res <- list(n = n, power = power)
  return(res)
}
CVs     <- seq(0.20, 0.40, 0.05)
theta0s <- seq(0.90, 0.95, 0.01)
x       <- sampleN.TOST.vectorized(CV = CVs, theta0 = theta0s,
                                   details = FALSE, print = FALSE)
cat("Sample size\n"); print(x$n); cat("Achieved power\n"); print(signif(x$power, digits = 5))
# Sample size
#            CV 0.20 CV 0.25 CV 0.30 CV 0.35 CV 0.40
# theta 0.90      38      56      80     106     134
# theta 0.91      32      48      66      88     112
# theta 0.92      28      40      56      76      96
# theta 0.93      24      36      50      66      84
# theta 0.94      22      32      44      58      74
# theta 0.95      20      28      40      52      66
# Achieved power
#            CV 0.20 CV 0.25 CV 0.30 CV 0.35 CV 0.40
# theta 0.90 0.81549 0.80358 0.80801 0.80541 0.80088
# theta 0.91 0.81537 0.81070 0.80217 0.80212 0.80016
# theta 0.92 0.82274 0.80173 0.80021 0.80678 0.80238
# theta 0.93 0.81729 0.81486 0.81102 0.80807 0.80655
# theta 0.94 0.83063 0.81796 0.81096 0.80781 0.80740
# theta 0.95 0.83468 0.80744 0.81585 0.80747 0.80525

Perhaps the capacity of the clinical site is limited. Any study can also be performed in a replicate design and assessed for ABE. As a rule of thumb the total sample in a 3-period replicate is ~¾ of the 2×2×2 crossover and the one of a 2-sequence 4-period replicate ~½ of the 2×2×2. The number of treatments and hence, of biosamples – which mainly drives the study’s cost – will be roughly the same.

designs <- c("2x2x2", "2x2x3", "2x3x3", "2x2x4")
# data.frame of results
res <- data.frame(design = designs, n = NA_integer_,
                  power = NA_real_, n.do = NA_integer_,
                  power.do = NA_real_,
                  stringsAsFactors = FALSE) # this line for R <4.0.0
for (i in 1:4) {
  # print = FALSE suppresses output to the console
  # we are only interested in columns 7-8
  # let's also calculate power for one dropout
  res[i, 2:3] <- sampleN.TOST(CV = 0.30, design = res$design[i],
                              print = FALSE)[7:8]
  res[i, 4]   <- res[i, 2] - 1
  res[i, 5]   <- suppressMessages(
                    power.TOST(CV = 0.30, design = res$design[i],
                               n = res[i, 4]))
}
print(res, row.names = FALSE)
#  design  n     power n.do  power.do
#   2x2x2 40 0.8158453   39 0.8056171
#   2x2x3 30 0.8204004   29 0.8068731
#   2x3x3 30 0.8204004   29 0.8063834
#   2x2x4 20 0.8202398   19 0.7991508

As expected – and as a bonus – we obtain a small gain in power, though in the 4-period design with one dropout power will be slightly compromised.
But why is power in the replicate designs higher than in the 2×2×2 crossover? If residual variances are equal, the width of the confidence interval depends only on the t-value and in particular on the degrees of freedom – which themselves depend on the design and the sample size.

#  design                      name  n formula df t.value
#   2x2x2           2x2x2 crossover 40     n-2 38   1.686
#   2x2x3 2x2x3 replicate crossover 30   2*n-3 57   1.672
#   2x3x3 partial replicate (2x3x3) 30   2*n-3 57   1.672
#   2x2x4 2x2x4 replicate crossover 20   3*n-4 56   1.673

If the capacity is 24 beds, we would opt for a 4-period full replicate.

As another option (e.g., if the blood volume is limited and/or there are concerns about a higher dropout-rate in a multiple-period study) we could stay with the 2×2×2 crossover but split the sample size into groups. In Europe (and for the FDA if certain conditions5 are fulfilled), there are no problems pooling the data and use the conventional model.

sequence + subject(sequence) + period + treatment

However, some regulators prefer to incorporate group-terms in the model.

group + sequence + subject(group × sequence) + 
period(group) + group × sequence + treatment

Since we have more terms in the model, we will loose some degrees of freedom. Let us explore in simulations how that would impact power. By default function power.TOST.sds() performs 100,000 simulations.

grouping <- function(capacity, n) {
  # split sample size into >=2 groups based on capacity
  if (n <= capacity) { # make equal groups
    ngrp <- rep(ceiling(n / 2), 2)
  } else {             # at least one = capacity
    ngrp    <- rep(0, ceiling(n / capacity))
    grps    <- length(ngrp)
    ngrp[1] <- capacity
    for (j in 2:grps) {
      n.tot <- sum(ngrp) # what we have so far
      if (n.tot + capacity <= n) {
        ngrp[j] <- capacity
      } else {
        ngrp[j] <- n - n.tot
      }
    }
  }
  return(ngrp = list(grps = length(ngrp), ngrp = ngrp))
}
CV        <- 0.30
capacity  <- 24 # clinical capacity
res       <- data.frame(n = NA_integer_, grps = NA_integer_,
                        n.grp = NA_integer_,
                        m.1 = NA_real_, m.2 = NA_real_)
x         <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV, print = FALSE, details = FALSE)
res$n     <- x[["Sample size"]]
res$m.1   <- x[["Achieved power"]]
x         <- grouping(capacity = capacity, n = res$n)
res$grps  <- x[["grps"]]
ngrp      <- x[["ngrp"]]
res$n.grp <- paste(ngrp, collapse = "|")
res$m.2   <- power.TOST.sds(CV = CV, n = res$n, grps = res$grps,
                            ngrp = ngrp, gmodel = 2, progress = FALSE)
res$loss <- 100*(res$m.2 - res$m.1) / res$m.1
names(res)[2:6] <- c("groups", "n/group", "pooled model",
                     "group model", "loss (%)")
res[1, 4:6] <- sprintf("%6.4f", res[1, 4:6])
cat("Achieved power and relative loss\n"); print(res, row.names = FALSE)
# Achieved power and relative loss
#   n groups n/group pooled model group model loss (%)
#  40      2   24|16       0.8158      0.8120  -0.4664

With ~0.5% the relative loss in power is practically negligible.

Example 2

Estimate the sample size for equivalence of the ratio of two means with normality on original scale based on Fieller’s (‘fiducial’) confidence interval.6 Crossover design, within-subject CVw 0.20, between-subject CVb 0.40.

sampleN.RatioF(CV = 0.20, CVb = 0.40)
# 
# +++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST +++++++++++
#     based on Fieller's confidence interval
#             Sample size estimation
# -----------------------------------------------
# Study design: 2x2 crossover
# Ratio of means with normality on original scale
# alpha = 0.025, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = 0.8 ... 1.25 
# True ratio = 0.95,  CVw = 0.2,  CVb = 0.4
# 
# Sample size
#  n     power
# 28   0.807774

In this function the default α is 0.025, since it is intended for studies with clinical endpoints, where the 95% confidence interval is usually used for equivalence testing.7

Example 3

Estimate the sample size based on the results of a 2×2×2 pilot study in 16 subjects where we observed an intra-subject CV 0.20 and θ0 0.92.

Basic

If we believe [sic] that in the pivotal study both the θ0 and CV will be exactly like in the pilot, this is a straightforward exercise. We simply provide the required arguments.

sampleN.TOST(CV = 0.20, theta0 = 0.92)
# 
# +++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST +++++++++++
#             Sample size estimation
# -----------------------------------------------
# Study design: 2x2 crossover 
# log-transformed data (multiplicative model)
# 
# alpha = 0.05, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = 0.8 ... 1.25 
# True ratio = 0.92,  CV = 0.2
# 
# Sample size (total)
#  n     power
# 28   0.822742

This approach is called by some ‘carved in stone’ because it relies on – very strong – assumptions which likely are not justified. Although power curves are relatively flat close to unity (i.e., the impact on power is small when moving from say, θ0 1 to 0.95) but they are getting increasingly steep when moving away more from unity.

Fig. 1 Power curve (\small{\alpha} 0.05, 2×2×2 design, CV 0.20; blue n = 28, black n = 22, red n = 16)
Fig. 1 Power curve (α 0.05, 2×2×2 design, CV 0.20;
blue n = 28, black n = 22, red n = 16)

Both θ0 and CV (as every estimate) are uncertain to some extent, which depends on the degrees of freedom (sample size and design). Hence, it might not be good idea to perform very small pilot studies (e.g., in only six subjects). Although it might be possible that in the pivotal study the CV is indeed lower than the one we observed in the pilot, it would be even more risky than the ‘carved in stone’ approach to assume a lower one in planning the pivotal study.

With the function CVCL() we can calculate confidence limits of the CV. It is advisable to use the upper confidence limit as a conservative approach. As a side effect – if the CV will be lower than assumed – we get a ‘safety margin’ for the T/R ratio.

df <- 16 - 2 # degrees of freedom of the 2x2x2 crossover pilot
CVCL(CV = 0.20, df = df, side = "upper", alpha = 0.20)[["upper CL"]]
# [1] 0.2443631

I prefer α=0.20 in analogy to the producer’s risk β=0.20 when planning for power π=1β=0.80. Gould proposed the more liberal α=0.25.8 Let us repeat the sample size estimation based on the upper CL of the CV.

CL.upper <- CVCL(CV = 0.20, df = 16 - 2, side = "upper",
                 alpha = 0.20)[["upper CL"]]
res <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CL.upper, theta0 = 0.92, print = FALSE)
print(res[7:8], row.names = FALSE)
#  Sample size Achieved power
#           40       0.816919

Of course, this has a massive impact on the sample size, which increases from 28 to 40. It might be difficult to convince the management to invest ~40% more than with the ‘carved in stone’ approach.

However, we can also explore how power would be affected if our assumption is true and the study will nevertheless be performed with only 28 subjects.

CL.upper <- CVCL(CV = 0.20, df = 16 - 2, side = "upper",
                 alpha = 0.20)[["upper CL"]]
power.TOST(CV = CL.upper, theta0 = 0.92, n = 28)
# [1] 0.679253

There will be a drop in power from the ~0.82 the management expects to only ~0.67. That’s just slightly higher than betting for two dozens in Roulette…

Fig. 2 Power for CV 0.244
Fig. 2 Power for CV 0.244

As mentioned above, if the CV turns out to be lower than assumed, we gain a ‘safety margin’ for the T/R ratio. Let us explore that. We perform the study with 40 subjects, the CV will be 0.22 (less than the ~0.24 we assumed), and the T/R with 0.90 will be worse than the 0.92 we assumed.

power.TOST(CV = 0.22, theta0 = 0.90, n = 40)
# [1] 0.7686761

Below our target but still acceptable.

Advanced

In the basic approach we concentrated mainly on the uncertainty of the CV. But this is not the end of the story. Clearly θ0 is uncertain as well. With the function expsampleN.TOST() we can dive deeper into this matter. Let us start with the CV only.

expsampleN.TOST(CV = 0.20, theta0 = 0.92, prior.type = "CV",
                prior.parm = list(m = 16, design = "2x2x2"))
# 
# ++++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST ++++++++++++
#        Sample size est. with uncertain CV
# -------------------------------------------------
# Study design:  2x2 crossover 
# log-transformed data (multiplicative model)
# 
# alpha = 0.05, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = 0.8 ... 1.25 
# Ratio = 0.92
# CV = 0.2 with 14 df
# 
# Sample size (ntotal)
#  n   exp. power
# 30   0.806069

Not that bad. The sample size increases fairly from the 28 of the ‘carved in stone’ approach to 30 but is substantially lower than the 40 we estimated based on the upper confidence limit of the CV.

Let us keep the CV ‘fixed’ and take only the uncertainty of θ0 into account.

expsampleN.TOST(CV = 0.20, theta0 = 0.92, prior.type = "theta0",
                prior.parm = list(m = 16, design = "2x2x2"))
# 
# ++++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST ++++++++++++
#      Sample size est. with uncertain theta0
# -------------------------------------------------
# Study design:  2x2 crossover 
# log-transformed data (multiplicative model)
# 
# alpha = 0.05, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = 0.8 ... 1.25 
# Ratio = 0.92
# CV = 0.2
# 
# Sample size (ntotal)
#  n   exp. power
# 46   0.805236

It starts to hurt. We saw already that power curves are getting steep if the T/R ratio is not close to unity. Our θ0 0.92 was not very nice but in the pivotal study it might be even lower as well – which has a larger impact on power than the CV.

Now for the ‘worst case scenario’, where we take both uncertainties into account.

expsampleN.TOST(CV = 0.20, theta0 = 0.92, prior.type = "both",
                prior.parm = list(m = 16, design = "2x2x2"),
                details = FALSE)
# 
# ++++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST ++++++++++++
#   Sample size est. with uncertain CV and theta0
# -------------------------------------------------
# Study design:  2x2 crossover 
# log-transformed data (multiplicative model)
# 
# alpha = 0.05, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = 0.8 ... 1.25 
# Ratio = 0.92 with 14 df
# CV = 0.2 with 14 df
# 
# Sample size (ntotal)
#  n   exp. power
# 54   0.802440

This sample size is almost twice the 28 your boss got from a popular Excel-Sheet.9 If you are not fired right away when suggesting such a study, take it as a warning what might happen.
At least, if the pivotal study is performed in a lower sample size and fails, you know why.

Fig. 3 Expected power for uncertain estimates (from top: CV, \theta_0, both)
Fig. 3 Expected power for uncertain estimates (from top: CV, θ0, both)

If you are adventurous, consider an Adaptive Two-Stage Sequential Design with sample size re-estimation. Various methods are provided in the package Power2Stage.10

Example 4

An alternative to an assumed θ0 is ‘Statistical Assurance’.11 This concept uses the distribution of T/R-ratios and assumes an uncertainty parameter σu. A natural assumption is σu=1θ0, i.e., for the commonly applied θ0=0.95 one can use the argument sem = 0.05 of the function expsampleN.TOST() where the argument theta0 must be kept at 1. The following example reproduces Table 1 of the paper.

CV  <- 0.214
res <- data.frame(target = c(rep(0.8, 5), rep(0.9, 5)),
                  theta0 = rep(c(1, seq(0.95, 0.92, -0.01)), 2),
                  n.1 = NA_integer_, power = NA_real_,
                  sigma.u = rep(c(0.0005, seq(0.05, 0.08, 0.01)), 2),
                  n.2 = NA_integer_, assurance = NA_real_)
for (i in 1:nrow(res)) {
  res[i, 3:4] <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV, targetpower = res$target[i],
                              theta0 = res$theta0[i], print = FALSE)[7:8]
  res[i, 6:7] <- expsampleN.TOST(CV = CV, targetpower = res$target[i],
                                 theta0 = 1, # mandatory!
                                 prior.type = "theta0",
                                 prior.parm = list(sem = res$sigma.u[i]),
                                 print = FALSE)[9:10]
}
res                 <- signif(res, 3)
res[, 5]            <- sprintf("%.2f", res[, 5])
names(res)[c(3, 6)] <- "n"
print(res, row.names = FALSE)
#  target theta0  n power sigma.u  n assurance
#     0.8   1.00 18 0.833    0.00 18     0.833
#     0.8   0.95 22 0.824    0.05 22     0.833
#     0.8   0.94 24 0.817    0.06 22     0.800
#     0.8   0.93 26 0.801    0.07 26     0.819
#     0.8   0.92 30 0.802    0.08 28     0.803
#     0.9   1.00 22 0.916    0.00 22     0.916
#     0.9   0.95 28 0.904    0.05 28     0.904
#     0.9   0.94 32 0.909    0.06 32     0.903
#     0.9   0.93 36 0.905    0.07 38     0.902
#     0.9   0.92 42 0.908    0.08 48     0.902

One caveat: Assuming no uncertainty (σu=0) would fail because the level of technical success is zero. Here a small value of 0.0005 was used instead.

Example 5

Estimate the sample size for a study of two blood pressure lowering drugs in a 2×2×2 design assessing the difference in means of untransformed data (raw, linear scale; i.e., specifying logscale = FALSE). In this setup everything has to be given with the same units (i.e., here θ0 –5 mm Hg, θ1 –15 mm Hg, θ2 +15 mm Hg systolic BP).

Assuming a residual standard deviation 20 mm Hg.

planned  <- "2x2x2"
logscale <- FALSE
theta0   <- -5
theta1   <- -15
theta2   <- +15 # if not given, -theta1 is used
SD.resid <-  20 # residual standard deviation
sampleN.TOST(CV = SD.resid, theta0 = theta0, theta1 = theta1,
             theta2 = theta2, logscale = logscale, design = planned)
# 
# +++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST +++++++++++
#             Sample size estimation
# -----------------------------------------------
# Study design: 2x2 crossover 
# untransformed data (additive model)
# 
# alpha = 0.05, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = -15 ... 15 
# True diff. = -5,  CV = 20
# 
# Sample size (total)
#  n     power
# 52   0.807468

Assuming a standard deviation of the difference T – R 28 mm Hg.

known    <- known.designs()[, c(2, 6)]           # extract relevant information
bk       <- known[known$design == planned, "bk"] # retrieve design constant
txt      <- paste0("The design constant for design \"",
                   planned, "\" is ", bk)
SD.delta <-  28                                  # standard deviation of the difference
SD.resid <-  SD.delta / sqrt(bk)                 # convert to residual SD
cat(txt); sampleN.TOST(CV = SD.resid, theta0 = theta0,
                       theta1 = theta1, theta2 = theta2,
                       logscale = logscale, design = planned)
# The design constant for design "2x2x2" is 2
# 
# +++++++++++ Equivalence test - TOST +++++++++++
#             Sample size estimation
# -----------------------------------------------
# Study design: 2x2 crossover 
# untransformed data (additive model)
# 
# alpha = 0.05, target power = 0.8
# BE margins = -15 ... 15 
# True diff. = -5,  CV = 19.79899
# 
# Sample size (total)
#  n     power
# 50   0.800423

Note that other software packages (e.g., PASS, nQuery, StudySize,…) require the standard deviation of the difference as input.

Higher-Order Designs

Designs with three and four treatments/periods are supported.

#  design            name   df
#   "3x3"   3x3 crossover 2n-4
# "3x6x3" 3x6x3 crossover 2n-4
#   "4x4"   4x4 crossover 3n-6

"3x3" denotes the Latin Square (ABC|BCA|CAB), "3x6x3" the 6-sequence Williams’ design (ABC|ACB|BAC|BCA|CAB|CBA), "4x4" the Latin Square (ABCD|BCDA|CDAB|DABC) or any of the possible Williams’ designs with four periods (ADBC|BACD|CBDA|DCAB, ADCB|BCDA|CABD|DBAC, ACDB|BDCA|CBAD|DABC, ACBD|BADC|CDAB|DBCA, ABDC|BCAD|CDBA|DACB, ABCD|BDAC|CADB|DCBA).

Which design argument in studies with more than two periods you should use depends on the planned evaluation.

Suppose we have a bioequivalence study with three treatments – A, B, and C – and the objective of the study is to make pairwise comparisons among the treatments. Suppose further that treatment C is different in kind from A and B, so that the assumption of homogeneous variance among the three treatments is questionable. One way to do the analyses, under normality assumptions, is Two at a Time – e.g., to test hypotheses about A and B, use only the data from A and B. Another way is All at Once – include the data from all three treatments in a single analysis, making pairwise comparisons within this analysis. If the assumption of homogeneous variance is correct, the All at Once approach will provide more d.f. for estimating the common variance, resulting in increased power. If the variance of C differs from that of A and B, the All at Once approach may have reduced power or an inflated type I error rate, depending on the direction of the difference in variances.
— Donald J. Schuirmann (2004)12

Apart from the regulatory recommendation we suggest this approach, since the ‘All at Once’ approach may lead to biased estimates and an inflated type I error.15

Three treatments intended for evaluation ‘All at Once’ or ‘Two at a Time’.

CV  <- 0.20
res <- data.frame(design = c("3x6x3", "2x2x2"), n = NA_integer_,
                  power = NA_real_, stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
for (i in 1:2) {
  res[i, 2:3] <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV, design = res$design[i],
                              print = FALSE)[7:8]
}
print(res, row.names = FALSE)
#  design  n     power
#   3x6x3 18 0.8089486
#   2x2x2 20 0.8346802

Four treatments (e.g., Test fasting and fed, Reference fasting and fed).

CV  <- 0.20
res <- data.frame(design = c("4x4", "2x2x2"), n = NA_integer_,
                  power = NA_real_, stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
for (i in 1:2) {
  res[i, 2:3] <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV, design = res$design[i],
                              print = FALSE)[7:8]
}
print(res, row.names = FALSE)
#  design  n     power
#     4x4 20 0.8527970
#   2x2x2 20 0.8346802

Power

Let us first recap the hypotheses in bioequivalence.

  1. The ‘Two One-Sided Tests Procedure’ (TOST)16 \small{H_\textrm{0L}:\frac{\mu_\textrm{T}}{\mu_\textrm{R}} \leq \theta_1\:vs\:H_\textrm{1L}:\frac{\mu_\textrm{T}}{\mu_\textrm{R}}>\theta_1} \small{H_\textrm{0U}:\frac{\mu_\textrm{T}}{\mu_\textrm{R}} \geq \theta_2\:vs\:H_\textrm{1U}:\frac{\mu_\textrm{T}}{\mu_\textrm{R}}<\theta_2}

  2. The confidence interval inclusion approach \small{H_0:\frac{\mu_\textrm{T}}{\mu_\textrm{R}}\ni \left\{ \theta_1, \theta_2 \right\}\:vs\:H_1:\theta_1<\frac{\mu_\textrm{T}}{\mu_\textrm{R}}<\theta_2}

Note that the null hypotheses imply bioinequivalence where \small{\left\{\theta_1,\theta_2\right\}} are the lower and upper limits of the bioequivalence range.
TOST provides a pair of \small{p} values (where \small{H_0} is not rejected if \small{\max}(p_\textrm{L},p_\textrm{U})>\alpha) and is of historical interest only because the CI inclusion approach is preferred in regulatory guidelines.

From a regulatory perspective the outcome of a comparative BA study is dichotomous.  Either  the study demonstrated bioequivalence (confidence interval entirely within \small{\left\{\theta_1,\theta_2\right\}})  or  not.17 Only if the CI lies entirely outside \small{\{\theta_1,\theta_2\}}, the null hypothesis is not rejected and further studies not warranted.
In any case, calculation of post hoc (a.k.a. a posteriori, retrospective) power is futile.18

There is simple intuition behind results like these: If my car made it to the top of the hill, then it is powerful enough to climb that hill; if it didn’t, then it obviously isn’t powerful enough. Retrospective power is an obvious answer to a rather uninteresting question. A more meaningful question is to ask whether the car is powerful enough to climb a particular hill never climbed before; or whether a different car can climb that new hill. Such questions are prospective, not retrospective.
— Russell V. Lenth (2000)19

If a study passes – despite lower than desired power – there is no reason to reject the study. It only means that assumptions (‼) in sample size estimation were not realized. The CV might have been higher, and/or the T/R-ratio worse, and/or the dropout-rate higher than anticipated. On the other hand, if post hoc power is higher than desired, it does not further support a study which already demonstrated BE.

Nevertheless, exploring power is useful when trying to understand why a study failed and to plan another study. Let us continue with the example from above. Ignoring our concerns, the management decided to perform the pivotal study with 28 subjects. The T/R-ratio was slightly worse (0.90), the CV higher (0.25), and we had one dropout in the first sequence and two in the second. The function CI.BE() comes handy.

n <- c(14 - 1, 14 - 2) # 14 dosed in each sequence
round(100*CI.BE(pe = 0.90, CV = 0.25, n = n), 2)
#  lower  upper 
#  79.87 101.42

The study failed although by a small margin. One might be tempted to repeat the study with an – only slightly – higher sample size. But what was the post hoc power of the failed study?

power.TOST(CV = 0.25, theta0 = 0.90, n = c(13, 12)) # observed values
# [1] 0.4963175

Actually the chance of passing was worse than tossing a coin.

NB, in calculating post hoc power the observed \small{\theta_0} has to be used. In some statistical reports high ‘power’ is given even for a failed study, which is not even wrong. Alas, \small{\theta_0=1} is still the default in some software packages.

power.TOST(CV = 0.20, theta0 = 0.92, n = 28)     # assumed in planning
# [1] 0.822742
power.TOST(CV = 0.25, theta0 = 1, n = c(13, 12)) # observed CV but wrong T/R-ratio
# [1] 0.8558252

Since all estimates were worse than assumed, how could one get a ‘power’ even higher than desired, despite the fact that the study failed to demonstrate bioequivalence? That’s nonsense, of course. \small{\theta_0=1} gives the ‘power to detect a significant difference of 20%’ – a flawed concept which was abandoned after Schuirmann’s paper of 1987.

Pooling

When planning the next study one can use the entire arsenal from above. Since we have more accurate estimates (from 25 subjects instead of the 16 of the pilot) the situation is more clear now.
As a further step we can take the information of both studies into account with the function CVpooled().

CVs <- ("  CV |  n | design | study
         0.20 | 16 |  2x2x2 | pilot
         0.25 | 25 |  2x2x2 | pivotal")
txtcon <- textConnection(CVs)
data   <- read.table(txtcon, header = TRUE, sep = "|",
                     strip.white = TRUE, as.is = TRUE)
close(txtcon)
print(CVpooled(data, alpha = 0.20), digits = 4, verbose = TRUE)
# Pooled CV = 0.2322 with 37 degrees of freedom
# Upper 80% confidence limit of CV = 0.2603

Before pooling, variances are weighted by the degrees of freedom. Hence, the new estimate is with ~0.23 closer to the 0.25 of the larger study. Note also that the upper confidence limit is with ~0.26 higher than the one of the pilot study with ~0.24.

Caveats

Don’t pool data blindly. In the ideal situation you know the entire background of all studies (clinical performance, bioanalytics). Even if all studies were performed at the same CRO, more things are important. One purpose of a pilot study is to find a suitable sampling schedule. If the sampling schedule of the pilot was not ideal (e.g., Cmax was not sufficiently enough described), pooling is not a good idea. It might well be that in the pivotal study – with a ‘better’ sampling schedule – its CV is more reliable. On the other hand, AUC is less sensitive to different sampling schedules.

Pooling data from the literature should be done with great caution (if at all). Possibly critical information is missing. Consider using a CV from the upper end of values instead. Common sense helps.

An example where pooling could be misleading: Cmax data of pilot and pivotal studies in five different designs with 11 to 39 subjects, fasting/fed, three different bioanalytical methods (GC/ECD, LC-MS/MS, GC/MS), chiral and achiral (which is not relevant for this drug since the active enantiomer is ~95% of the total drug and there is no in vivo interconversion). Note that most pivotal studies were ‘overpowered’.

Fig. 4 Blue deltoid pooled CV 0.163; dotted line its upper CL 0.167.
Fig. 4 Blue deltoid pooled CV 0.163; dotted line its upper CL 0.167.

This is an apples-and-oranges comparison. Red squares show CVs which were above the upper CL of the pooled CV. Given, only in two studies (#1, #6) their lower CL did not overlap the upper one of the pooled CV.

Which side of the great divide are you on? Do you believe that meta is better or do you hold instead that pooling is fooling? Well, to nail my colours to the mast, I belong to the former school. It seems to me that there is no other topic in medical statistics, with the possible exceptions of cross-over trials, bioequivalence and n-of-1 studies, which has the same capacity as this one to rot the brains.

Hints

Power Analysis

Although we suggest to explore the various options shown in Example 3, it is worthwhile to have a first look with the function pa.ABE().

pa.ABE(CV = 0.20, theta0 = 0.92)
# Sample size plan ABE
#  Design alpha  CV theta0 theta1 theta2 Sample size Achieved power
#     2x2  0.05 0.2   0.92    0.8   1.25          28       0.822742
# 
# Power analysis
# CV, theta0 and number of subjects leading to min. acceptable power of ~0.7:
#  CV= 0.2377, theta0= 0.9001
#  n = 21 (power= 0.7104)
Fig. 5 Power Analysis (in each panel one argument is varied and others kept constant)
Fig. 5 Power Analysis (in each panel one argument is varied and others kept constant)

This exercise confirms what we already know. The most critical parameter is \small{\theta_0}, whereas dropouts are the least important.

More details are given in the vignette Power Analysis.

Dropouts

As we have seen, the impact of dropouts on power is rather limited. Regularly CROs suggest additional subjects to ‘compensate for the potential loss in power’. IMHO, milking sponsors to make wealthy CROs richer. Note that the dropout-rate is based on dosed subjects. Hence, the correct formula for the adjusted sample size \small{n{}'} based on the estimated one \small{n} is \small{n{}'=n / (1-{dropout\:rate})}, and not \small{n{}'=n \times (1+{dropout\:rate})}. An example for studies with three periods:

balance <- function(x, y) {
  return(y * (x %/% y + as.logical(x %% y)))
}
do        <- 0.15 # anticipated dropout-rate 15%
seqs      <- 3
n         <- seq(12L, 96L, 12L)
res       <- data.frame(n = n,
                        adj1 = balance(n / (1 - do), seqs), # correct
                        elig1 = NA_integer_, diff1 = NA_integer_,
                        adj2 = balance(n * (1 + do), seqs), # wrong
                        elig2 = NA_integer_, diff2 = NA_integer_)
res$elig1 <- floor(res$adj1 * (1 - do))
res$diff1 <- sprintf("%+i", res$elig1 - n)
res$elig2 <- floor(res$adj2 * (1 - do))
res$diff2 <- sprintf("%+i", res$elig2 - n)
invisible(
  ifelse(res$elig1 - n >=0,
         res$optim <- res$elig1,
         res$optim <- res$elig2))
res$diff  <- sprintf("%+i", res$optim - n)
names(res)[c(2, 5)] <- c("n'1", "n'2")
res$diff1[which(res$diff1 == "+0")] <- "\u00B10"
res$diff2[which(res$diff2 == "+0")] <- "\u00B10"
res$diff[which(res$diff == "+0")]   <- "\u00B10"
print(res, row.names = FALSE)
#   n n'1 elig1 diff1 n'2 elig2 diff2 optim diff
#  12  15    12    ±0  15    12    ±0    12   ±0
#  24  30    25    +1  30    25    +1    25   +1
#  36  45    38    +2  42    35    -1    38   +2
#  48  57    48    ±0  57    48    ±0    48   ±0
#  60  72    61    +1  69    58    -2    61   +1
#  72  87    73    +1  84    71    -1    73   +1
#  84  99    84    ±0  99    84    ±0    84   ±0
#  96 114    96    ±0 111    94    -2    96   ±0

With the wrong formula – especially for high dropout rates – you might end up with less eligible subjects (elig2) than planned thus compromising power. On the other hand, with the correct one (due to rounding up to get balanced sequences) you might end up with slightly too many (elig1). Of course, if you want to be one the safe side, you can select the ‘best’ (column optim).

Literature Data

Sometimes the CV is not given in the literature. By means of the function CVfromCI() we can calculate it from the confidence interval, the design, and the sample size.21

CVfromCI(lower = 0.8323, upper = 1.0392, design = "2x2x4", n = 26)
# [1] 0.3498608

The method is exact if the subjects/sequence are known. In the literature quite often only the total sample size is given and the function tries to keep sequences as balanced as possible. What if the study was imbalanced?
A total sample size of 26 was reported. The study was either balanced or imbalanced to an unknown degree:

n      <- 26
CV.est <- CVfromCI(lower = 0.8323, upper = 1.0392,
                   design = "2x2x4", n = 26)
n.est  <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV.est, design = "2x2x4",
                       print = FALSE)[["Sample size"]]
n1     <- balance(seq(n, 18, -1), 2) / 2
n2     <- n - n1
nseqs  <- unique(data.frame(n1 = n1, n2 = n2, n = n))
res    <- data.frame(n1 = nseqs$n1, n2 = nseqs$n2,
                     CV.true = NA_real_,
                     CV.est = CV.est, n.true = NA_integer_,
                     n.est = n.est)
for (i in 1:nrow(res)) {
  res$CV.true[i] <- CVfromCI(lower = 0.8323, upper = 1.0392,
                             design = "2x2x4",
                             n = c(res$n1[i], res$n2[i]))
  res$n.true[i]  <- sampleN.TOST(CV = res$CV.true[i], design = "2x2x4",
                                 print = FALSE)[["Sample size"]]
  res$n.est[i]   <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV.est, design = "2x2x4",
                                 print = FALSE)[["Sample size"]]
}
print(signif(res, 5), row.names = FALSE)
#  n1 n2 CV.true  CV.est n.true n.est
#  13 13 0.34986 0.34986     26    26
#  12 14 0.34876 0.34986     26    26
#  11 15 0.34546 0.34986     26    26
#  10 16 0.33988 0.34986     24    26
#   9 17 0.33196 0.34986     24    26

The true CV of any imbalanced study might have been lower than what we assumed. That means, if we use the estimated CV – falsely assuming balanced sequences – our sample size estimation will always be conservative.

Direction of Deviation

If you are unsure about the direction of the deviation of T from R (lower or higher) always assume \small{\theta_0<1}.

CV   <- 0.21
d    <- 0.05 # delta 5%, direction unknown
n    <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV, theta0 = 1 - d, print = FALSE,
                     details = FALSE)[["Sample size"]]
res1 <- data.frame(CV = CV, theta0 = c(1 - d, 1 / (1 - d)),
                   n = n, power = NA_real_)
for (i in 1:nrow(res1)) {
  res1$power[i] <- power.TOST(CV = CV, theta0 = res1$theta0[i], n = n)
}
n    <- sampleN.TOST(CV = CV, theta0 = 1 + d,
                     print = FALSE)[["Sample size"]]
res2 <- data.frame(CV = CV, theta0 = c(1 + d, 1 / (1 + d)),
                   n = n, power = NA_real_)
for (i in 1:nrow(res1)) {
  res2$power[i] <- power.TOST(CV = CV, theta0 = res2$theta0[i], n = n)
}
res <- rbind(res1, res2)
print(signif(res[order(res$n, res$theta0), ], 4), row.names = FALSE)
#    CV theta0  n  power
#  0.21 0.9524 20 0.8081
#  0.21 1.0500 20 0.8081
#  0.21 0.9500 22 0.8374
#  0.21 1.0530 22 0.8374

If you use 1.05 (sample size 20) power will be maintained all the way down to its reciprocal (0.9524) but not to 0.95 (where you would already need a sample size of 22). On the other hand, 0.95 preserves power up to 1.053. The statement ‘sample size based on a deviation of ±5%’ seen in many protocol does not make sense.

Authors

function author(s)
sampleN.TOST, power.TOST, power.TOST.sds, sampleN.RatioF,
CVCL, CI.BE, CVpooled
Detlew Labes
expsampleN.TOST Benjamin Lang, Detlew Labes
CVfromCI Detlew Labes, Helmut Schütz, Benjamin Lang
pa.ABE Helmut Schütz, Detlew Labes

License

GPL-3 2024-03-18 Helmut Schütz


  1. It is common a misconception that in a parallel design one obtains the between- (inter-) subject variability. The fact that products are administered only once does not mean that the within-subject variability does not exist (we observed only one occasion). Hence, the variability consists of both between- and within-components. We can estimate the between-subject variability only in a crossover design. Referring to between-subject variability in a parallel design is sloppy terminology at least.↩︎

  2. Owen DB. A special case of a bivariate non-central t-distribution. Biometrika. 1965: 52(3/4); 437–46. doi:10.2307/2333696.↩︎

  3. R Documentation. R-manual. Data Frames. 2022-02-08. Online.↩︎

  4. In other functions of PowerTOST the sample size is not given in the seventh column but always named "Sample size".↩︎

  5. Schütz H. Multi-Group Studies in Bioequivalence. To pool or not to pool? Review of Guidelines. BioBridges. Prague, 26–27 September, 2018. Online.↩︎

  6. Fieller EC. Some Problems In Interval Estimation. J Royal Stat Soc B. 1954; 16(2): 175–85. JSTOR:2984043.↩︎

  7. EMEA, CPMP. Points to Consider on Switching between Superiority and Non-Inferiority. London. 27 July 2000. CPMP/EWP/482/99. Online.↩︎

  8. Gould AL. Group Sequential Extension of a Standard Bioequivalence Testing Procedure. J Pharmacokin Biopharm. 1995: 23(1); 57–86. doi:10.1007/BF02353786.↩︎

  9. Dubins D. My Tiny Contribution to Clinical Research: FARTSSIE. 2021-03-21. GitHub.↩︎

  10. Labes D, Lang B, Schütz H. Power2Stage: Power and Sample-Size Distribution of 2-Stage Bioequivalence Studies. 2021-11-20. CRAN.↩︎

  11. Ring A, Lang B, Kazaroho C, Labes D, Schall R, Schütz H. Sample size determination in bioequivalence studies using statistical assurance. Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2019; 85(10): 2369–77. doi:10.1111/bcp.14055. Open access.↩︎

  12. Schuirmann DJ. Two at a Time? Or All at Once? International Biometric Society, Eastern North American Region, Spring Meeting. Pittsburgh, PA. March 28 – 31, 2004. Online abstract.↩︎

  13. EMA, CHMP. Guideline on the Investigation of Bioequivalence. London. 20 January 2010. CPMP/EWP/QWP/1401/98 Rev. 1/ Corr **. Online.↩︎

  14. EGA. Revised EMA Bioequivalence Guideline. Questions & Answers. Online.↩︎

  15. D’Angelo P. Testing for Bioequivalence in Higher‐Order Crossover Designs: Two‐at‐a‐Time Principle Versus Pooled ANOVA. 2nd Conference of the Global Bioequivalence Harmonisation Initiative. Rockville, MD. 15–16 September, 2016.↩︎

  16. Schuirmann DJ. A Comparison of the Two One-Sided Tests Procedure and the Power Approach for Assessing the Equivalence of Average Bioavailability. J Pharmacokin Biopharm. 1987; 15(6): 657–80. doi:10.1007/BF01068419.↩︎

  17. If the CI overlaps \small{\{\theta_1,\theta_2\}}, the outcome is indecisive (called ‘the gray zone’ by some). As long as \small{\theta_0} lies within \small{\{\theta_1,\theta_2\}} you can hope to show BE in a larger sample size. However, once \small{\theta_0} approaches one of the limits, if might be futile – even with a very small CV. Try
      sampleN.TOST(CV = 0.075, theta0 = 0.81) and then
      sampleN.TOST(CV = 0.075, theta0 = 0.80) to get an idea.↩︎

  18. Hoenig JM, Heisey DM. The Abuse of Power: The Pervasive Fallacy of Power Calculations for Data Analysis. Am Stat. 2001; 55(1): 19–24. Open access.↩︎

  19. Lenth RA. Two Sample-Size Practices that I Don’t Recommend. Online.↩︎

  20. Senn S. A Dip in the Pool. 2020-05-03. Online.↩︎

  21. Schütz H. Sample Size Estimation for BE Studies: Algebra… Bucharest. 19 March 2013. Online↩︎