Assessing Agreement of Repeated Binary Measurements with an Application to the CDC’s Anthrax Vaccine Clinical Trial
Cohen’s kappa coefficient, which was introduced in 1960, serves as the most widely employed coefficient to assess inter-observer agreement for categorical outcomes. However, the original kappa can only be applied to cross-sectional binary measurements and, therefore, cannot be applied in the practical situation when the observers evaluate the same subjects at repeated time intervals. This study summarizes six methods of assessing agreement of repeated binary outcomes under different assumptions and discusses under which condition we should use the most appropriate method in practice. These approaches are illustrated using data from the CDC anthrax vaccine adsorbed (AVA) human clinical trial comparing the agreement for two solicited adverse events after AVA between the 1–3 day in-clinic medical record and the patient’s diary on the same day. We hope this article can inspire researchers to choose the most appropriate method to assess agreement for their own study with longitudinal binary data.
Year of publication: |
2013
|
---|---|
Authors: | Yi, Pan ; Rose Charles E. ; Michael, Haber ; Yan, Ma ; Carrasco Josep L. ; Brock, Stewart ; Keitel Wendy A. ; Harry, Keyserling ; Jacobson Robert M. ; Gregory, Poland ; McNeil Michael M. |
Published in: |
The International Journal of Biostatistics. - De Gruyter, ISSN 1557-4679. - Vol. 9.2013, 1, p. 14-14
|
Publisher: |
De Gruyter |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Pan, Yi, (2017)
-
War memory : evidence from assistance during Great East Japan Earthquake
Pan, Yi, (2019)
-
Sustainability of China's listed commercial banks under background of the "new normal"
Chen, Ke, (2020)
- More ...