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arxiv: 2411.18510 · v2 · pith:O47E4USHnew · submitted 2024-11-27 · 📊 stat.ME

A subgroup-aware scoring approach to the study of effect modification in observational studies

classification 📊 stat.ME
keywords effectmodificationtreatmentmethodsubgroupssubmaxbiaslarger
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Effect modification means the size of a treatment effect varies with an observed covariate. Generally speaking, a larger treatment effect with more stable error terms is less sensitive to bias. Thus, we might be able to conclude that a study is less sensitive to unmeasured bias by using these subgroups experiencing larger treatment effects. Lee et al. (2018) proposed the submax method that leverages the joint distribution of test statistics from subgroups to draw a firmer conclusion if effect modification occurs. However, one version of the submax method uses M-statistics as the test statistics and is implemented in the R package submax (Rosenbaum, 2017). The scaling factor in the M-statistics is computed using all observations combined across subgroups. We show that this combining can confuse effect modification with outliers. We propose a novel group M-statistic that scores the matched pairs in each subgroup to tackle the issue. We examine our novel scoring strategy in extensive settings to show the superior performance. The proposed method is applied to an observational study of the effect of a malaria prevention treatment in West Africa.

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  1. Adaptive discovery of effect modification in matched observational studies

    stat.ME 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    A finite-sample valid method discovers and selects covariate-interpretable subgroups with effect modification in matched observational studies, exactly controlling subgroup-level FDR and incorporating sensitivity anal...