Our proposal focuses on the development of a class of new and novel nonparametric likelihood methods for statistical inference to handle problems encountered during a recent clinical trial, Oral Health and Ventilator- Associated Pneumonia-A Phase III Randomized Single Center Trial (Grant number: 1 R01DE14685 - 01A1). A total of 175 patients in an intensive care unit (ICU) were treated with chlorhexidine oral rinse once or twice per day or with a placebo control, and followed until they were discharged. Outcome variables include oral colonization by target micro-organisms, the dental Plaque Index score and diagnostic variables for pneumonia. Three major issues that warrant the statistical investigation were as follows. 1) A data attrition problem exists in the data sets with respect to variables such as the Plaque Index and bacterial colonization scores in the oral cavity. In longitudinal studies, the attrition of the experimental units is a major problem and currently nonparametric likelihood methods have not been well developed to solve the problem. In particular, for oral health research, multiple outcomes from a patient and the corresponding correlation structure further complicate the data analysis. 2) General outcome measurements are subject to instrument sensitivity where values are not available because of the limit of detection and subject to measurement errors. 3) There is systematic missingness in the data due to the fact that one variable is observed only if the other variable satisfies a certain condition such as exceeding a threshold (e.g., CPIS and triggering collections of BAL). This project proposes the development of statistical inference methods using the nonparametric likelihood approaches to test multiple groups in the presence of incomplete data or data attrition. Some available parametric likelihood (PL) approaches can address the missing data problem, however, for incomplete data, these parametric assumptions cannot be tested using standard goodness-of-fit tests. We will develop a series of nonparametric likelihood methods relevant to the structure of incomplete data, where missing patterns are taken into account. These new methods will allow the users to avoid strong distributional assumptions by using a nonparametric approach. We will pay special attention toward utilizing the maximum information retained in the pattern of incomplete data. This novel approach will provide more powerful and accurate analyses. This approach is also immediately useful for the analysis of oral health data in general, since common dental caries or periodontal disease datasets are riddled with similar missing data problems. To help transfer of the methodology, we plan to develop user-friendly software. The investigators also plan, in the context of this proposal, to train students and medical investigators with the correct and powerful approaches to the given challenges. Application of these methods will enable flexible and powerful inference in clinical investigations. If fully successful, we believe that the proposed methods have a great potential to be adopted as a primary statistical tool that changes the practice of study planning for various clinical areas.

Public Health Relevance

Although performing clinical trials is a necessary step to develop beneficial and fool-proof treatments for diseases, methodological/statistical limitations often cause a less flexibility in study designs and subsequent data analysis. Continuing development of statistical methods that can handle more realistic problems from actual clinical trials is imperative. This proposal focuses on the development of the novel statistical methodology for incomplete/missing data, a common problem in clinical trials, with respect to the oral health research based on the study """"""""Oral Health and Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia-A Phase III Randomized Single Center Trial"""""""".

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research (NIDCR)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
1R03DE020851-01A1
Application #
8046672
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDE1-LK (25))
Program Officer
Atkinson, Jane C
Project Start
2011-06-01
Project End
2013-05-31
Budget Start
2011-06-01
Budget End
2012-05-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$158,500
Indirect Cost
Name
State University of New York at Buffalo
Department
Biostatistics & Other Math Sci
Type
Schools of Allied Health Profes
DUNS #
038633251
City
Buffalo
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
14260
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Vexler, Albert; Gurevich, Gregory; Hutson, Alan D (2013) An Exact Density-Based Empirical Likelihood Ratio Test for Paired Data. J Stat Plan Inference 143:334-345
Vexler, Albert; Deng, Wei; Wilding, Gregory E (2013) Nonparametric Bayes Factors Based On Empirical Likelihood Ratios. J Stat Plan Inference 143:611-620
Vexler, Albert; Tsai, Wan-Min; Gurevich, Gregory et al. (2012) Two-sample density-based empirical likelihood ratio tests based on paired data, with application to a treatment study of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and severe mood dysregulation. Stat Med 31:1821-37
Vexler, Albert; Tsai, Wan-Min; Malinovsky, Yaakov (2012) Estimation and testing based on data subject to measurement errors: from parametric to non-parametric likelihood methods. Stat Med 31:2498-512