A tool designed to estimate the necessary number of subjects for a study aiming to demonstrate that a new treatment is not substantially worse than an existing, established treatment. It operates by determining the minimum group size required to statistically rule out an unacceptable difference in efficacy between the two treatments. For example, in pharmaceutical research, it is utilized to ascertain if a novel drug performs comparably to a standard medication within a predefined margin of acceptable difference.
Proper determination of the required group size is critical for the ethical and efficient conduct of research. Underestimating the necessary enrollment can lead to a study that fails to reach a valid conclusion, wasting resources and potentially exposing subjects to interventions without generating meaningful data. Overestimating can lead to unnecessary participation, raising ethical concerns and increasing costs without improving the validity of the findings. Historically, inadequate planning in this area has resulted in numerous inconclusive trials, highlighting the need for robust methodologies in research design.