Abstract
The European and United States Pharmacopoeia demand a noninferiority study on the detection of microorganisms when an alternate qualitative microbiological method is intended to replace the compendial microbiological method. However, without imposing any modeling assumptions or constraints, noninferiority studies require large numbers of test samples for a proposed noninferiority criterion of 0.7 or higher for each microorganism. When we can assume that the accuracy of the alternate method with respect to the compendial method is homogeneous across microorganisms, a joint statistical analysis of the data from all microorganisms can be used to help reduce the sample size dramatically. For this situation, we provide a test statistic for noninferiority, an optimal spiking experiment, and a sample size calculation approach under only mild modeling assumptions of the microorganism-specific detection proportions. We illustrate our approach on a real dataset and demonstrate good performance of our method using simulation studies.
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