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Improving efficiency in transporting average treatment effects

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  • K E Rudolph
  • N T Williams
  • E A Stuart
  • I Díaz

Abstract

We develop flexible, semiparametric estimators of the average treatment effect transported to a new target population, which offer potential efficiency gains. Transport may be of value when the average treatment effect may differ across populations. We consider the setting where differences in the average treatment effect are due to differences in the distribution of effect modifiers, baseline covariates that modify the treatment effect. First, we propose a collaborative one-step semiparametric estimator that can improve efficiency. This approach does not require researchers to have knowledge about which covariates are effect modifiers and which differ in distribution between the populations, but it does require all covariates to be measured in the target population. Second, we propose two one-step semiparametric estimators that assume knowledge of which covariates are effect modifiers and which are both effect modifiers and differentially distributed between the populations. These estimators can be used even when not all covariates are observed in the target population; one estimator requires that only effect modifiers be observed, and the other requires that only those modifiers that are also differentially distributed be observed. We use simulations to compare the finite-sample performance of our proposed estimators and an existing semiparametric estimator of the transported average treatment effect, including in the presence of practical violations of the positivity assumption. Lastly, we apply our proposed estimators to a large-scale housing trial.

Suggested Citation

  • K E Rudolph & N T Williams & E A Stuart & I Díaz, 2025. "Improving efficiency in transporting average treatment effects," Biometrika, Biometrika Trust, vol. 112(3), pages 7345-7352.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:biomet:v:112:y:2025:i:3:p:7345-52.
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10.1093/biomet/asaf027
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