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Impact of model misspecification in shared frailty survival models.

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-07-24, 14:11 authored by Alessandro Gasparini, Mark S. Clements, Keith R. Abrams, Michael J. Crowther
Survival models incorporating random effects to account for unmeasured heterogeneity are being increasingly used in biostatistical and applied research. Specifically, unmeasured covariates whose lack of inclusion in the model would lead to biased, inefficient results are commonly modeled by including a subject-specific (or cluster-specific) frailty term that follows a given distribution (eg, gamma or lognormal). Despite that, in the context of parametric frailty models, little is known about the impact of misspecifying the baseline hazard or the frailty distribution or both. Therefore, our aim is to quantify the impact of such misspecification in a wide variety of clinically plausible scenarios via Monte Carlo simulation, using open-source software readily available to applied researchers. We generate clustered survival data assuming various baseline hazard functions, including mixture distributions with turning points, and assess the impact of sample size, variance of the frailty, baseline hazard function, and frailty distribution. Models compared include standard parametric distributions and more flexible spline-based approaches; we also included semiparametric Cox models. The resulting bias can be clinically relevant. In conclusion, we highlight the importance of fitting models that are flexible enough and the importance of assessing model fit. We illustrate our conclusions with two applications using data on diabetic retinopathy and bladder cancer. Our results show the importance of assessing model fit with respect to the baseline hazard function and the distribution of the frailty: misspecifying the former leads to biased relative and absolute risk estimates, whereas misspecifying the latter affects absolute risk estimates and measures of heterogeneity.

Funding

MS Clements was supported by the Swedish eScience Research Centre. KR Abrams was partially supported by the UK National Institute for Health Research as a Senior Investigator Emeritus (NF‐SI‐0512‐10159). MJ Crowther was partially funded by Medical Research Council New Investigator Research Grant MR/P015433/1.

History

Citation

Statistics in Medicine, 2019

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Statistics in Medicine

Publisher

Wiley

eissn

1097-0258

Acceptance date

2019-06-11

Copyright date

2019

Publisher version

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/sim.8309

Notes

All the R code used to run this simulation study is freely available online, alongside a dataset with all the results of this Monte Carlo simulation study: https://github.com/ellessenne/frailtymcsim.;The file associated with this record is under embargo until 12 months after publication, in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. The full text may be available through the publisher links provided above.

Language

en

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