Aim: To determine the required sample size (per group) to determine effect of an intervention given at time A, B and C on the proportion of people that "convert" compared to baseline.
Question: which SAS procedure allows for the calculation of required sample size to compare multiple proportions (here there are four groups (three interventions: control/A control/B and control/C)?
.. it seems that SAS PROC POWER only allows sample size determination for comparing two proportions
As an aside, once the "experiment" is finished I plan to:
* Use PROC FREQ CHISQ option.
* If significant, then use PROC MULTTEST to determine which intervention differs from baseline.
(Please comment if this would be incorrect ...). The support page Performing multiple comparisons or tests on subtables following a significant Pearson chi-square suggests that multiplicity-adjusted Fisher or Cochran-Armitage tests can be used, but also provides an example of using the Bonferonni adjustment.
Update Whilst I am interested in the response and correct method on doing this, I realised that for this application there isn't a need to be so statistically correct. What I plan to do is just determine the sample size required to compare two proportions... and then use this sample size for each of the interventions.
e.g. :
proc power;
twosamplefreq test=fisher
groupproportions = (.1 .15)
power = .8
npergroup = .
sides = U;
run;
which would mean I need 576 people in each of the four groups... and if no intervention has an effect, I have a 15% chance of saying one does... (which I can live with) when comparing the three pairwise tests (control/A control/B and control/C).
Another option I can think of is to calculate the required sample size at an alpha of 0.05/3 = 0.0167 (approx Bonferonni correction) then test for significance using chi-squared and then use
proc multtest pdata=chisq bon;
run;