Interval censored data arise naturally in large scale panel studies where subjects can only be followed periodically and the event of interest can only be recorded as having occurred between two examination times. In this paper we consider the problem of comparing two interval-censored samples. We p
Linear regression for bivariate censored data via multiple imputation
โ Scribed by Wei Pan; Charles Kooperberg
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 104 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0277-6715
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โฆ Synopsis
Bivariate survival data arise, for example, in twin studies and studies of both eyes or ears of the same individual. Often it is of interest to regress the survival times on a set of predictors. In this paper we extend Wei and Tanner's multiple imputation approach for linear regression with univariate censored data to bivariate censored data. We formulate a class of censored bivariate linear regression methods by iterating between the following two steps: 1. the data is augmented by imputing survival times for censored observations; 2. a linear model is fit to the imputed complete data. We consider three different methods to implement these two steps. In particular, the marginal (independence) approach ignores the possible correlation between two survival times when estimating the regression coefficient. To improve the efficiency, we propose two methods that account for the correlation between the survival times. First, we improve the efficiency by using generalized least squares regression in step 2. Second, instead of generating data from an estimate of the marginal distribution we generate data from a bivariate log-spline density estimate in step 1. Through simulation studies we find that the performance of the two methods that take the dependence into account is close and that they are both more efficient than the marginal approach. The methods are applied to a data set from an otitis media clinical trial.
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A data augmentation algorithm is presented for estimating the hazard function and pointwise variability intervals based on interval censored data. The algorithm extends that proposed by Tanner and Wong for grouped right censored data to interval censored data. It applies multiple imputation and loca