Bayesian random-effects threshold regression with application to survival data with nonproportional hazards

Citation
L. Pennell, Michael et al., Bayesian random-effects threshold regression with application to survival data with nonproportional hazards, Biostatistics (Oxford. Print) , 11(1), 2010, pp. 111-126
ISSN journal
14654644
Volume
11
Issue
1
Year of publication
2010
Pages
111 - 126
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
In epidemiological and clinical studies, time-to-event data often violate the assumptions of Cox regression due to the presence of time-dependent covariate effects and unmeasured risk factors.An alternative approach, which does not require proportional hazards, is to use a first hitting time model which treats a subject's health status as a latent stochastic process that fails when it reaches a threshold value.Although more flexible than Cox regression, existing methods do not account for unmeasured covariates in both the initial state and the rate of the process.To address this issue, we propose a Bayesian methodology that models an individual's health status as a Wiener process with subject-specific initial state and drift.Posterior inference proceeds via a Markov chain Monte Carlo methodology with data augmentation steps to sample the final health status of censored observations.We apply our method to data from melanoma patients with nonproportional hazards and find interesting differences from a similar model without random effects.In a simulation study, we show that failure to account for unmeasured covariates can lead to inaccurate estimates of survival probabilities.