Prior to marketing, the long-term safety profile of a new therapy is often uncertain. One recommendation for premarket safety studies is to compare the new therapy to an appropriate control to determine whether the 95 confidence interval of the risk ratio is entirely less than a prespecified threshold (e.g., 1.8). The restriction to the risk ratio, however, has consequences that may not be intended. Risk difference may be a more appropriate measure of risk in this setting when event rates are very low. We propose using a suitable combination of risk ratio and risk difference in demonstrating noninferiority.
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