Analytical approaches and estimands to take account of missing patient-reported data in longitudinal studies

Patient Relat Outcome Meas. 2019 Apr 16:10:129-140. doi: 10.2147/PROM.S178963. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Patient-reported outcomes, such as quality of life, functioning, and symptoms, are used widely in therapeutic and behavioral trials and are increasingly used in drug development to represent the patient voice. Missing patient reported data is common and can undermine the validity of results reporting by reducing power, biasing estimates, and ultimately reducing confidence in the results. In this paper, we review statistically principled approaches for handling missing patient-reported outcome data and introduce the idea of estimands in the context of behavioral trials. Specifically, we outline a plan that considers missing data at each stage of research: design, data collection, analysis, and reporting. The design stage includes processes to prevent missing data, define the estimand, and specify primary and sensitivity analyses. The analytic strategy considering missing data depends on the estimand. Reviewed approaches include maximum likelihood-based models, multiple imputation, generalized estimating equations, and responder analysis. We outline sensitivity analyses to assess the robustness of the primary analysis results when data are missing. We also describe ad-hoc methods, including approaches to avoid. Last, we demonstrate methods using data from a behavioral intervention, where the primary outcome was self-reported cognition.

Keywords: estimands; imputation; missing data; patient-reported outcomes; sensitivity analysis.