Efficient determination of optimised multi-arm multi-stage experimental designs with control of generalised error-rates
Primarily motivated by the drug development process, several publications have now presented methodology for the design of multi-arm multi-stage experiments with normally distributed outcome variables of known variance. Here, we extend these past considerations to allow the design of what we refer to as an abcd multi-arm multi-stage experiment. We provide a proof of how strong control of the a-generalised type-I familywise error-rate can be ensured. We then describe how to attain the power to reject at least b out of c false hypotheses, which is related to controlling the b-generalised type-II familywise error-rate. Following this, we detail how a design can be optimised for a scenario in which rejection of any d null hypotheses brings about termination of the experiment. We achieve this by proposing a highly computationally efficient approach for evaluating the performance of a candidate design. Finally, using a real clinical trial as a motivating example, we explore the effect of the design's control parameters on the statistical operating characteristics.
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