Sample sizes required to estimate the protective efficacy of a vaccine when there is an unequal allocation of individuals across the vaccine and placebo groups

Article Type

Research Article

Publication Title

Statistical Methods in Medical Research

Abstract

The effectiveness of a vaccine is measured by means of protective vaccine efficacy, defined by (Formula presented.), where (Formula presented.) and (Formula presented.) are, respectively, the disease attack rates in the vaccinated and the unvaccinated population. For each of the cohoret and case-control designs, methods have been presented in the literature for calculating the required sample size when the desired width of the confidence interval and the probability of coverage are pre-specified, where an equal number of individuals were assumed to be allocated to the vaccine and placebo group. In this article, we present a method for calculating the required sample size with a specified degree of precision when there is an unequal allocation of individuals across the two groups. The sample size required to achieve a desired power for the relevant level (Formula presented.) test has also been explored, keeping the unequal allocation proportion in mind. The fraction of individuals allocated to the placebo group ((Formula presented.)) can be so chosen that the total sample size or the expected number of people developing the disease or some other criteria of interest is minimized.

First Page

1859

Last Page

1879

DOI

https://10.1177/09622802231176807

Publication Date

10-1-2023

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