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Cause‐Specific Cumulative Incidence Estimation and the Fine and Gray Model Under Both Left Truncation and Right Censoring
Authors:Ronald B Geskus
Institution:1. Academic Medical Center, Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Meibergdreef 15, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Amsterdam Health Service, Nieuwe Achtergracht 100, 1018 WT Amsterdam, The Netherlands
email: statistics@inter.nl.net
Abstract:Summary The standard estimator for the cause‐specific cumulative incidence function in a competing risks setting with left truncated and/or right censored data can be written in two alternative forms. One is a weighted empirical cumulative distribution function and the other a product‐limit estimator. This equivalence suggests an alternative view of the analysis of time‐to‐event data with left truncation and right censoring: individuals who are still at risk or experienced an earlier competing event receive weights from the censoring and truncation mechanisms. As a consequence, inference on the cumulative scale can be performed using weighted versions of standard procedures. This holds for estimation of the cause‐specific cumulative incidence function as well as for estimation of the regression parameters in the Fine and Gray proportional subdistribution hazards model. We show that, with the appropriate filtration, a martingale property holds that allows deriving asymptotic results for the proportional subdistribution hazards model in the same way as for the standard Cox proportional hazards model. Estimation of the cause‐specific cumulative incidence function and regression on the subdistribution hazard can be performed using standard software for survival analysis if the software allows for inclusion of time‐dependent weights. We show the implementation in the R statistical package. The proportional subdistribution hazards model is used to investigate the effect of calendar period as a deterministic external time varying covariate, which can be seen as a special case of left truncation, on AIDS related and non‐AIDS related cumulative mortality.
Keywords:Competing risks  Inverse probability weight  Subdistribution hazard  Survival analysis
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