RE: [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]

From: Joseph Standing Date: March 02, 2011 technical Source: mail-archive.com
Hi Paul, As I understand it, you don't have data from all trimesters in all subjects (and anyhow categorising your data like this may not be helpful), so I don't think it is appropriate to constrain occasions to correspond to trimesters. I would include an OCC column which increases for every sampling occasion within an individual, and then have a BOV term for each of these. This will have the effect of allowing a single subject's parameters to change with occasion, and then (provided shrinkage is not an issue) you can plot individual parameters vs trimester, or better still some continuous scale e.g. week of pregnancy. Before doing that however, I would be tempted to parameterise your model into CL V (Q VP... if multi comp) and scale everything for size (linear wt on volume, and wt^0.75 on CL and Q). Don't fall into the trap of believing women are not small pregnant women, as perhaps in the case of ranitidine pharmacokinetics they are (you will know this if your plots of OCC vs pregnancy week are trendless). If not, you have delineated size from pregnancy effect, and can test e.g. pregnancy week as a covariate. BW, Joe
Quoted reply history
________________________________________ From: [email protected] [[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] [[email protected]] Sent: 01 March 2011 15:52 To: nm nm Subject: [NMusers] [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy] ---------------------------- Original Message ---------------------------- Subject: occasions during pregnancy From: [email protected] Date: Tue, March 1, 2011 10:49 am To: "nm nm" <[email protected]> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hi all nmusers, I thank all who responded my questions yesterday. Almost all the responses suggested that several occasions of one patient should be put under one ID #. I re-code my control stream and adjusted the data file as following: $PK K12 = THETA(1)*EXP(ETA(1)) CL= THETA(2)*EXP(ETA(2)+ETA(6)*TRI1+ETA(7)*TRI2+ETA(8)*TRI3+ETA(9)*TRI4) $OMEGA .8; .1 .8; .1 .1 .8; .1 .1 .1 .8; .1 .1 .1 .1 .8; $OMEGA BLOCK(1) 0.9; $OMEGA BLOCK(1) SAME; $OMEGA BLOCK(1) SAME; $OMEGA BLOCK(1) SAME; where TRI1,TRI2,TRI3, and TRI4 are different stages of pregnancy. This model fits poorly for the data (from the plot of PRED, IPRED VS. DV), although the estimates are stable and reasonable. If I treat the different occasions as different patients, ignoring the correlation within the same patients, then the model fits quite well and the results are reasonable. I also noticed one note from Lewis Sheiner: Note that, as happens more often, at least with human data, than one might have thought, the IOV>IIV, then treating each occaasion as though it were a distinct individual is a reasonable approximation. --------------Date: Wed, 17 Nov 1999 13:57:18 -0800 From: Lewis Sheiner <[email protected]> Subject: Re: repeating cases--------- The parameters during pregnancy change quite large, so I am not sure if it is a reasonalble approximation to treat occasions as distinct individual, or I have to search the better models of putting those occasions under one ID? and what is the direction to improve the model? Any suggestion is greatly appreciated. Paul School of Pharmacy University of Pittsburgh 716 Salk Hall 3501 Terrace Street Pittsburgh, PA 15261 Phone: 412-648-8546 E-mail: [email protected] Yuanyue (Paul) Gao School of Pharmacy University of Pittsburgh 716 Salk Hall 3501 Terrace Street Pittsburgh, PA 15261 Phone: 412-648-8546 E-mail: [email protected] ******************************************************************************************************************** This message may contain confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient please inform the sender that you have received the message in error before deleting it. Please do not disclose, copy or distribute information in this e-mail or take any action in reliance on its contents: to do so is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. Thank you for your co-operation. NHSmail is the secure email and directory service available for all NHS staff in England and Scotland NHSmail is approved for exchanging patient data and other sensitive information with NHSmail and GSi recipients NHSmail provides an email address for your career in the NHS and can be accessed anywhere For more information and to find out how you can switch, visit www.connectingforhealth.nhs.uk/nhsmail ********************************************************************************************************************
Mar 01, 2011 Yug10 [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]
Mar 01, 2011 Kenneth Kowalski RE: [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]
Mar 01, 2011 Kevin Dykstra RE: [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]
Mar 01, 2011 Nick Holford Re: [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]
Mar 01, 2011 Armel Stockis Re: [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]
Mar 01, 2011 Stephen Duffull RE: [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]
Mar 02, 2011 Joseph Standing RE: [Fwd: occasions during pregnancy]