Design and analysis of nested case–control studies for recurrent events subject to a terminal event

The process by which patients experience a series of recurrent events, such as hospitalizations, may be subject to death. In cohort studies, one strategy for analyzing such data is to fit a joint frailty model for the intensities of the recurrent event and death, which estimates covariate effects on...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inStatistics in Medicine Vol. 38; no. 22; pp. 4348 - 4362
Main Authors Jazić, Ina, Haneuse, Sebastien, French, Benjamin, MacGrogan, Gaëtan, Rondeau, Virginie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Wiley 30.09.2019
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
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Summary:The process by which patients experience a series of recurrent events, such as hospitalizations, may be subject to death. In cohort studies, one strategy for analyzing such data is to fit a joint frailty model for the intensities of the recurrent event and death, which estimates covariate effects on the two event types while accounting for their dependence. When certain covariates are difficult to obtain, however, researchers may only have the resources to subsample patients on whom to collect complete data: one way is using the nested case–control (NCC) design, in which risk set sampling is performed based on a single outcome. We develop a general framework for the design of NCC studies in the presence of recurrent and terminal events and propose estimation and inference for a joint frailty model for recurrence and death using data arising from such studies. We propose a maximum weighted penalized likelihood approach using flexible spline models for the baseline intensity functions. Two standard error estimators are proposed: a sandwich estimator and a perturbation resampling procedure. We investigate operating characteristics of our estimators as well as design considerations via a simulation study and illustrate our methods using two studies: one on recurrent cardiac hospitalizations in patients with heart failure and the other on local recurrence and metastasis in patients with breast cancer.
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USDOE
DE‐HS0000031
ISSN:0277-6715
1097-0258
1097-0258
DOI:10.1002/sim.8302