Statistical significance and clinical relevance: the importance of power in clinical trials in dermatology
- PMID: 15611433
- DOI: 10.1001/archderm.140.12.1520
Statistical significance and clinical relevance: the importance of power in clinical trials in dermatology
Abstract
When evaluating the validity of a study, the reader must consider both the clinical and statistical significance of the findings. A study that claims clinical relevance may lack sufficient statistical significance to make a meaningful statement. Conversely, a study that shows a statistically significant difference in 2 treatment options may lack practicality. The concept of power of a clinical trial refers to the probability of detecting a difference between study groups when a true difference exists. We will discuss statistical power by examining studies too small to identify important differences, studies so large as to identify differences that are not clinically significant, difficult-to-design studies without very large patient populations, and those studies with both adequate power and clinically relevant findings. Dermatologists should not focus on small P values alone to decide whether a treatment is clinically useful; it is essential to consider the magnitude of treatment differences and the power of the study.
Comment in
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Commentary: Statistical Significance Versus Clinical Relevance in Periodontal Research: Implications for Clinical Practice.J Periodontol. 2016 Jun;87(6):613-6. doi: 10.1902/jop.2016.150554. Epub 2016 Jan 11. J Periodontol. 2016. PMID: 26751344 No abstract available.