Simulating survival data with predefined censoring rates under a mixture of non-informative right censoring schemes

Author(s):  
Fei Wan
Author(s):  
Thomas H. Scheike ◽  
Klaus Kähler Holst

Familial aggregation refers to the fact that a particular disease may be overrepresented in some families due to genetic or environmental factors. When studying such phenomena, it is clear that one important aspect is the age of onset of the disease in question, and in addition, the data will typically be right-censored. Therefore, one must apply lifetime data methods to quantify such dependence and to separate it into different sources using polygenic modeling. Another important point is that the occurrence of a particular disease can be prevented by death—that is, competing risks—and therefore, the familial aggregation should be studied in a model that allows for both death and the occurrence of the disease. We here demonstrate how polygenic modeling can be done for both survival data and competing risks data dealing with right-censoring. The competing risks modeling that we focus on is closely related to the liability threshold model. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Statistics and Its Application, Volume 9 is March 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


Author(s):  
Umar Usman ◽  
Shamsuddeen Suleiman ◽  
Bello Magaji Arkilla ◽  
Yakubu Aliyu

In this paper, a new long term survival model called Nadarajah-Haghighi model for survival data with long term survivors was proposed. The model is used in fitting data where the population of interest is a mixture of individuals that are susceptible to the event of interest and individuals that are not susceptible to the event of interest. The statistical properties of the proposed model including quantile function, moments, mean and variance were provided. Maximum likelihood estimation procedure was used to estimate the parameters of the model assuming right censoring. Furthermore, Bayesian method of estimation was also employed in estimating the parameters of the model assuming right censoring. Simulations study was performed in order to ascertain the performances of the MLE estimators. Random samples of different sample sizes were generated from the model with some arbitrary values for the parameters for 5%, 1:3% and 1:5% cure fraction values. Bias, standard error and mean square error were used as discrimination criteria. Additionally, we compared the performance of the proposed model with some competing models. The results of the applications indicates that the proposed model is more efficient than the models compared with. Finally, we fitted some models considering type of treatment as a covariate. It was observed that the covariate  have effect on the shape parameter of the proposed model.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 445-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hoora Moradian ◽  
Denis Larocque ◽  
François Bellavance

Tree-based methods are very powerful and popular tools for analysing survival data with right-censoring. The existing methods assume that the true time-to-event and the censoring times are independent given the covariates. We propose different ways to build survival forests when dependent censoring is suspected, by using an appropriate estimator of the survival function when aggregating the individual trees and/or by modifying the splitting rule. The appropriate estimator used in this paper is the copula-graphic estimator. We also propose a new method for building survival forests, called p-forest, that may be used not only when dependent censoring is suspected, but also as a new survival forest method in general. The results from a simulation study indicate that these modifications improve greatly the estimation of the survival function in situations of dependent censoring. A real data example illustrates how the proposed methods can be used to perform a sensitivity analysis.


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