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http://dx.doi.org/10.4196/kjpp.2009.13.5.367

Comparison of Parametric and Bootstrap Method in Bioequivalence Test  

Ahn, Byung-Jin (Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea)
Yim, Dong-Seok (Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea)
Publication Information
The Korean Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology / v.13, no.5, 2009 , pp. 367-371 More about this Journal
Abstract
The estimation of 90% parametric confidence intervals (CIs) of mean AUC and Cmax ratios in bioequivalence (BE) tests are based upon the assumption that formulation effects in log-transformed data are normally distributed. To compare the parametric CIs with those obtained from nonparametric methods we performed repeated estimation of bootstrap-resampled datasets. The AUC and Cmax values from 3 archived datasets were used. BE tests on 1,000 resampled data sets from each archived dataset were performed using SAS (Enterprise Guide Ver.3). Bootstrap nonparametric 90% CIs of formulation effects were then compared with the parametric 90% CIs of the original datasets. The 90% CIs of formulation effects estimated from the 3 archived datasets were slightly different from nonparametric 90% CIs obtained from BE tests on resampled datasets. Histograms and density curves of formulation effects obtained from resampled datasets were similar to those of normal distribution. However, in 2 of 3 resampled log (AUC) datasets, the estimates of formulation effects did not follow the Gaussian distribution. Bias-corrected and accelerated (BCa) CIs, one of the nonparametric CIs of formulation effects, shifted outside the parametric 90% CIs of the archived datasets in these 2 non-normally distributed resampled log (AUC) datasets. Currently, the 80~125% rule based upon the parametric 90% CIs is widely accepted under the assumption of normally distributed formulation effects in log-transformed data. However, nonparametric CIs may be a better choice when data do not follow this assumption.
Keywords
Bioequivalence; Bootstrap; Confidence interval; Nonparametric method;
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