BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
Yughaber
Quartz | Level 8

Hello, 

 

I am in great need of some guidance towards power calculation. I need to calculate the number of minimum subjects needed for a specific research study and the power of that study. I looked into proc power but am still a bit unsure of the whole thing and would appreciate some insight. 

 

The research is pretty simple and basic. I have two groups undergoing the same surgery but patients in each group are being treated with a different drug (drug A and drug B respectively for each group), I would like to see if drug A is better than drug B. I am using a t-test for this comparison of means. 

 

Thanks! 

4 REPLIES 4
SteveDenham
Jade | Level 19

One thing to consider is the distribution of your response variable - continuous, count, proportion - as all need to handled a bit differently in PROC POWER.

 

SteveDenham

Yughaber
Quartz | Level 8

is there maybe a reference/resource I can learn from for this specific point?

SteveDenham
Jade | Level 19

The PROC POWER documentation is an excellent place to start for power and sample size calculations.  For distributions, it is hard to beat Merran Evans Statistical Distributions.

 

SteveDenham

sas-innovate-white.png

Missed SAS Innovate in Orlando?

Catch the best of SAS Innovate 2025 — anytime, anywhere. Stream powerful keynotes, real-world demos, and game-changing insights from the world’s leading data and AI minds.

 

Register now

What is ANOVA?

ANOVA, or Analysis Of Variance, is used to compare the averages or means of two or more populations to better understand how they differ. Watch this tutorial for more.

Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.

Discussion stats
  • 4 replies
  • 1107 views
  • 2 likes
  • 3 in conversation