Medicine Information

The P Value And Its Significance


When diversifying an investment portfolio, one needs to consider investing in the healthcare industries. Pharmaceutical companies that have strong pipelines of investigation drugs have strong growth speculations. In addition to examining its pipelines, one also needs to be able to evaluate the results of its clinical trials. When a news program reports the results of a clinical trial for a new drug to be "statistically significant," what does it mean? And how did they come up with that conclusion? One of the most important values to look for when interpreting the results of a study is the P value.

Elenbaas et al defines P value as "the probability that a type I error has been committed, and that the null hypothesis has been falsely rejected." Let's briefly talk about the null hypothesis, type I error, and type II error. Lets say a new drug A is being compared to a currently available drug B. The first assumption that investigators will make is that the new drug A is equivalent or is equal in efficacy to the currently available drug B. This assumption is called the null hypothesis (H0). A contradicting assumption to the null hypothesis is the alternative hypothesis (H1). H1 says that the new drug A is more effective than the currently available drug B. In fact, the alternative hypothesis (H1) is what the investigators want to prove because the pharmaceutical companies developing the new drugs fund most of its clinical trials. Type I error occurs when H0 is rejected when it is really true. In other words, investigators believe that the new drug A is more effective than the currently available drug B (rejecting H0), when drug A is equal in efficacy to drug B, or worst, not as effective as drug B. Type II error occurs when H1 is actually true (drug A is more effective than drug B), but the investigators failed to reject H0 (did not reject the hypothesis that drug A is equal in efficacy as drug B).

With the technical terminologies defined, lets go back to the P value. To reiterate, P value is "the probability that a type I error has been committed, and that the null hypothesis has been falsely rejected." (Elenbass et al). The P value is said to be "statistically significant" when it is < 0.05. For example, a clinical trial comparing the effectiveness between drug A and drug B, found that drug A worked better at lowering the blood pressure than drug B, and the P value was calculated to be 0.04. This means that there is a 4% chance that a type I error is being committed (investigators falsely believe that drug A is more effective than drug B, when they are equal in efficacy). 0.05 is the largest acceptable P value in clinical literature. When investigators claim that drug A is more effective than drug B, they were correct 95% of the time, with only less than 5% chance error.

There are many other important statistical values, but they are beyond the scope of this article. Now, whenever a reporter on television reports the results of a clinical trial for a new drug to be "statistically significant," one can perform their own verification by obtaining a copy of that study and look for the P value.

References:

1. Elenbaas RM, Elenbass JK, and Cuddy PG, et al. Evaluating the medical literature part II: statistical analysis. Annals of Emergency Medicine. October 1983;12(10):35-45.

2. Anderson HG, Kendrach MG, and Trice S, et al. Understanding statistical and clinical significance: hypothesis testing. Journal of pharmacy practice. June 1998;11(3):181-195.

http://www.onlinefreedomwork.com


MORE RESOURCES:

National Academy of Sports Medicine Launches New Course ...
MarketWatch - 9 hours ago
CALABASAS, CA, Nov 21, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX) -- The National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM; www.nasm.org), a leader in fitness training ...


PR Web (press release)

BodyLogicMD Sponsors American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine
MarketWatch - 17 hours ago
"It is a natural step for BodyLogicMD in terms of demonstrating our growth and support in the field of anti-aging medicine and bioidentical hormone therapy. ...
BodyLogicMD Opens Bioidentical Hormone Therapy Location in Chicago PR Web (press release)
all 12 news articles


University of South Alabama College of Medicine Chooses MDaudit(TM)
MarketWatch - 3 hours ago
... WIRE) -- Hayes Management Consulting announced today that it will provide its MDaudit(TM) software to University of South Alabama College of Medicine. ...


WNCT

Three Employees Fired After Patient Chokes on Medicine, Dies
FOXNews - Nov 20, 2008
GOLDSBORO, NC — North Carolina officials have fired three employees and disciplined others in the death of a patient who was neglected for more than 22 ...
Firings a good first step in neglect case CharlotteObserver.com
all 38 news articles


BBC News

The uneasy link between war and medicine
BBC News, UK - 13 hours ago
Each portray the stark realities of war in their time, and show how medicine has struggled over the years to heal the injured. In one corner of the Wellcome ...
War and Medicine at the Wellcome Collection, NW1 Times Online
all 2 news articles


guardian.co.uk

The wrong medicine
TheDay, CT - 11 hours ago
If we had any reasonable expectation that a $25 billion federal loan would fix what ails the Detroit auto industry, we would support it. ...
Video: Automakers Testify As Hopes for Aid Falter AssociatedPress
Auto bailout must come with strings Visalia Times-Delta
all 1,404 news articles


Entry Level Finding Ways to Help Children With Cancer
New York Times, United States - 5 hours ago
She comes to the job with a master’s degree in Oriental medicine from Touro College and a lifelong love of cooking. On doing acupuncture on small children: ...


Tongjitang Chinese Medicines Company to Announce Third Quarter ...
FOXBusiness - 5 hours ago
Tongjitang Chinese Medicines Company, through its operating subsidiaries Tongjitang Pharmaceutical, Tongjitang Distribution, Tongjitang Chain Stores, ...


Overworked doctors would not recommend careers in medicine
SmartBrief, DC - 3 hours ago
A survey of primary care doctors indicates most feel overworked and would not recommend medicine as a career. Nearly half the doctors who responded to the ...


Research and Markets: This Global Research Report in Medicine and ...
MarketWatch - Nov 19, 2008
Nanomaterials, nanophotonics, nanoelectronics and nanoscience in medicine & biology represent the largest concentration of R&D. ...

Medicine - Google News

home | site map
© 2006