Test of Significance for High-Dimensional Thresholds with Application to Individualized Minimal Clinically Important Difference

This work is motivated by learning the individualized minimal clinically important difference, a vital concept to assess clinical importance in various biomedical studies. We formulate the scientific question into a high-dimensional statistical problem where the parameter of interest lies in an indi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of the American Statistical Association Vol. 119; no. 546; pp. 1396 - 1408
Main Authors Feng, Huijie, Duan, Jingyi, Ning, Yang, Zhao, Jiwei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Alexandria Taylor & Francis 02.04.2024
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Summary:This work is motivated by learning the individualized minimal clinically important difference, a vital concept to assess clinical importance in various biomedical studies. We formulate the scientific question into a high-dimensional statistical problem where the parameter of interest lies in an individualized linear threshold. The goal is to develop a hypothesis testing procedure for the significance of a single element in this parameter as well as of a linear combination of this parameter. The difficulty dues to the high-dimensional nuisance in developing such a testing procedure, and also stems from the fact that this high-dimensional threshold model is nonregular and the limiting distribution of the corresponding estimator is nonstandard. To deal with these challenges, we construct a test statistic via a new bias-corrected smoothed decorrelated score approach, and establish its asymptotic distributions under both null and local alternative hypotheses. We propose a double-smoothing approach to select the optimal bandwidth in our test statistic and provide theoretical guarantees for the selected bandwidth. We conduct simulation studies to demonstrate how our proposed procedure can be applied in empirical studies. We apply the proposed method to a clinical trial where the scientific goal is to assess the clinical importance of a surgery procedure. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.
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ISSN:0162-1459
1537-274X
1537-274X
DOI:10.1080/01621459.2023.2195977