Title of article
Safety Evaluation and Confidence Intervals When the Number of Observed Events Is Small or Zero, ,
Author/Authors
Borko D. Jovanovic، نويسنده , , Robert J Zalenski، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
6
From page
301
To page
306
Abstract
A common objective in many clinical studies is to determine the safety of a diagnostic test or therapeutic intervention. In these evaluations, serious adverse effects are either rare or not encountered. In this setting, the estimation of the confidence interval (CI) for the unknown proportion of adverse events has special importance. When no adverse events are encountered, commonly used approximate methods for calculating CIs cannot be applied, and such information is not commonly reported. Furthermore, when only a few adverse events are encountered, the approximate methods for calculation of CIs can be applied, but are neither appropriate nor accurate. In both situations, CIs should be computed with the use of the exact binomial distribution. We discuss the need for such estimation and provide correct methods and rules of thumb for quick computations of accurate approximations of the 95% and 99.9% CIs when the observed number of adverse events is zero. [Jovanovic BD, Zalenski RJ: Safety evaluation and confidence intervals when number of observed events is small or zero. Ann Emerg Med September 1997;30:301-306.]
Journal title
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Record number
535868
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