Gail, M.; Simon, R. Testing for qualitative interactions between treatment effects and patient subsets. (English) Zbl 0614.62140 Biometrics 41, 361-372 (1985). Evaluation of evidence that treatment efficacy varies substantially among different subsets of patients is an important feature of the analysis of large clinical trials. Qualitative or crossover interactions are said to occur when one treatment is superior for some subsets of patients and the alternative treatment is superior for other subsets. A non-crossover interaction arises when there is variation in the magnitude, but not in the direction, of treatment effects among subsets. Some authors use the term quantitative interaction to mean non-crossover interaction. Non- crossover interactions are usually of less clinical importance than qualitative interactions, which often have major therapeutic significance. A likelihood ratio test is developed to test for qualitative interactions. Exact critical values are determined and tabulated. Cited in 3 ReviewsCited in 26 Documents MSC: 62P10 Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis 62H15 Hypothesis testing in multivariate analysis Keywords:analysis of large clinical trials; crossover interactions; likelihood ratio test; test for qualitative interactions; critical values PDF BibTeX XML Cite \textit{M. Gail} and \textit{R. Simon}, Biometrics 41, 361--372 (1985; Zbl 0614.62140) Full Text: DOI OpenURL