Title :
Monte Carlo simulation experiments for analysis of HIV vaccine effects and vaccine trial design
Author :
Barth-Jones, Daniel C. ; Adams, Andrew L. ; Koopman, James S.
Author_Institution :
Center for Healthcare Effectiveness Res., Wayne State Univ., Detroit, MI, USA
Abstract :
The field of infectious disease epidemiology has increasingly adopted stochastic simulation technologies to simulate complex infectious disease transmission systems. Such simulations have both increased the scientific understanding of infectious disease transmission dynamics and served as important tools for evaluating epidemiologic study designs and statistical methods. This paper reports on a discrete event simulation to analyze the Retrospective Partner Trials (RPT) HIV vaccine trial design. A specially designed simulation system, HIVSIM, was used to simulate data resulting from the RPT design vaccine trials. HIVSIM explicitly models complex HIV transmission dynamics (e.g., sexual partner mixing patterns and concurrent sexual partnerships) and vaccine trial design characteristics. Monte Carlo simulation analyses conducted with HIVSIM indicate that the RPT design is able to produce vaccine effect estimates with acceptably small bias, high precision and excellent statistical power under plausible HIV vaccine trial conditions. Additionally, the explicit simulation of HIV transmission dynamics permits investigations into the common, but unwarranted, statistical independence assumptions routinely used in the estimation of vaccine effects
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; discrete event simulation; diseases; medical computing; patient treatment; statistical analysis; HIV vaccine effects; HIV vaccine trial design; HIVSIM; Monte Carlo simulation; Retrospective Partner Trials; bias; discrete event simulation; disease transmission; experiments; infectious disease epidemiology; medical simulation; sexual partnerships; statistical independence assumptions; statistical methods; stochastic simulation; Computational modeling; Design methodology; Discrete event simulation; Diseases; Human immunodeficiency virus; Mathematical model; Medical simulation; Monte Carlo methods; Statistical analysis; Vaccines;
Conference_Titel :
Simulation Conference, 2000. Proceedings. Winter
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6579-8
DOI :
10.1109/WSC.2000.899196