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A New Algorithm for Unequal Allocation Randomization

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Presentation on theme: "A New Algorithm for Unequal Allocation Randomization"— Presentation transcript:

1 A New Algorithm for Unequal Allocation Randomization
Wenle Zhao, PhD Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, 29425, USA Society for Clinical Trials 36th Annual Meeting Arlington, VA, USA - May 17-20, 2015

2 Contents What do We Need? For unequal allocation randomization:
Why unequal allocation What features do we need? What algorithms do we have? What are the problems? A solution

3 What Features do We Need?
Accurately target the desired allocation Want 1:√2:√3, not 1:2:3, 2:3:4, or 3:4:5. Consistent imbalance control |Achieved – Target | < MTI High allocation randomness Low allocation predictability Simple formula for easy implementation P(Ti = j) = F(X, Y, Z)

4 What Algorithms do We Have
Accurate Target Consistent Balancing Random Allocation Easy Implement Permuted Block Randomization No Yes No Yes Block Urn Design - Zhao & Weng No Yes No Yes Maximal Procedure -- Berger No Yes Yes No Modified Urn Design -- Rosenberger & Lachin No No Yes Yes Brick Tunnel Randomization -- Kuznetsova & Tymofyeyev Yes Yes No No Complete Randomization Yes No Yes Yes

5 The Problem of Permuted Block Randomization
Allocation 7:9 IM ≤ 1.5 Δ = 1.5 1:1 Block size = 4 DA = 33.3% IM = n 2:3 Block size = 5 DA = 30.0% IM= n 3:4 Block size = 7 DA = 22.9% IM= n 7:9 Block size = 16 DA = 11.4% IM = 5.53 Small block size  high precision low accuracy Large block size  low precision high accuracy

6 Current Unequal Allocation Randomization Methods

7 Trade-off Between Desired Features
Large block size Small block size Accuracy Precision Accuracy Precision Accuracy Precision

8 Mass-Weighted Urn Design
A Solution Mass-Weighted Urn Design

9 The Procedure Target Allocation 1 : √2 : √3 = 0.2412 : 0.3411 : 0.4177
The urn starts with one ball for each arm. Mass of each ball is proportional to the target allocation ratio, in continuous format. Total mass in the urn = α, a pre-specified value. Randomly draw a ball with probability proportional to the mass of each ball. Assign the subject accordingly. The mass of the ball is reduced by 1 unit. This 1 unit mass is re-distributed to each arm based on the target allocation ratio. Repeat steps 3 to 6 until the end of the study.

10 Conditional Probability
The Conditional Allocation Probability as target allocation . as treatment allocation sequence. as achieved allocation after Ti. as mass for the balls in the urn after Ti. as conditional allocation probability for Ti. Conditional Probability Target Probability Observed Number Expected Number

11 Conditional Allocation Probability
Subject Treatment Assignment 1.0 Conditional Allocation Probability 0.342 0.278 0.382 R = 0.794 R = 0.542 R = 0.252 Random Variable U(0,1) Treatment Allocation

12 Imbalance & Randomness in Unequal Allocation
Target Allocation Ratio: B Achieved Distribution: Target Distribution: Treatment Imbalance: Conditional Allocation Probability Allocation Randomness A

13 Conditional Allocation Probability
Possible Scenario of Negative Mass 1.0 P3 = 0.696 P1= 0.304 -0.128 P3 = 0.786 P1= 0.342 Conditional Allocation Probability R = 0.468 R = 0.252 Random Variable U(0,1) Treatment Allocation

14 Performance Comparison

15 Summary Accurately target the desired allocation
Directly target any unequal allocation Consistent imbalance control Contained by parameter alpha High allocation randomness Achieved by parameter alpha Simple formula for easy implementation

16 Summary Mass Weighted Urn Design Yes Yes Yes Yes
Accurate Target Consistent Balancing Random Allocation Easy Implement Mass Weighted Urn Design Yes Yes Yes Yes Permuted Block Randomization No Yes No Yes Block Urn Design - Zhao & Weng No Yes No Yes Maximal Procedure -- Berger No Yes Yes No Modified Urn Design -- Rosenberger & Lachin No No Yes Yes Brick Tunnel Randomization -- Kuznetsova & Tymofyeyev Yes Yes No No Complete Randomization Yes No Yes Yes

17 Discussion Unconditional allocation probability for each assignment
Formula for the maximal imbalance Asymptotic allocation convenience Knowledge dissemination

18 Acknowledgement This research is partly supported by following NIH/NINDS grants: U01NS (NETT Palesch, Y. & Durkalski, V.) U01NS (StrokeNet, Palesch, Y. & Zhao, W.)

19 Thank You! Contact me at:

20 Performance Comparison
Table 2. Performance comparison between MWUD and alternative designs Optimal allocation = 1: √2 : √3 , sample size = 100, simulation = 50,000 per scenario Randomization design Target allocation Parameter Average Allocation Predictability * Average Treatment Imbalance † Complete randomization 4.8072 Modified Urn Design α = 1, β = 1 0.0586 3.9141 Permuted Block Randomization (block size = b) 2 : 3 : 4 b = 9 0.2841 1.9584 5 : 7 : 8 b = 20 0.2121 1.7374 10 : 14 : 17 b = 41 0.1378 1.8466 Mass Weighted Urn Design α = 2 0.3480 0.7747 α = 4 0.2501 1.0268 α = 6 0.2032 1.2359 α = 8 0.1747 1.4134 †: Calculated based on the Euclidean distance between the desired treatment distribution and the achieved treatment distribution, averaged across the randomization sequence and the simulation runs. *: Calculated based on the Euclidean distance between the desired allocation probability and the conditional allocation probability, averaged across the randomization sequence and the simulation runs.

21

22 Equipoise + Maximum Power  Equal Allocation

23 Maximal Treatment Imbalance

24 Equipoise + Maximum Power  Equal Allocation
0.564 0.522

25 Change Allocation Ratio
Bayesian Adaptive Design  Unequal Allocation Change Allocation Ratio


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