Optimal testing of multiple hypotheses with common effect direction
Richard M. Bittman,
Joseph P. Romano,
Carlos Vallarino and
Michael Wolf
Biometrika, 2009, vol. 96, issue 2, 399-410
Abstract:
We present a theoretical basis for testing related endpoints. Typically, it is known how to construct tests of the individual hypotheses, but not how to combine them into a multiple test procedure that controls the familywise error rate. Using the closure method, we emphasize the role of consonant procedures, from an interpretive as well as a theoretical viewpoint. Surprisingly, even if each intersection test has an optimality property, the overall procedure obtained by applying closure to these tests may be inadmissible. We introduce a new procedure, which is consonant and has a maximin property under the normal model. The results are then applied to PROactive, a clinical trial designed to investigate the effectiveness of a glucose-lowering drug on macrovascular outcomes among patients with type 2 diabetes. Copyright 2009, Oxford University Press.
Date: 2009
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