Statistical models for prevalent cohort data.
暂无分享,去创建一个
In prospective cohort studies individuals are sometimes recruited according to a certain cross-sectional sampling criterion. A prevalent cohort is defined as a group of individuals who have a certain disease at enrollment into the study. Statistical models for the analysis of prevalent cohort data are considered when the onset or diagnosis time of the disease is known. The incident proportional hazards model, where the time scale is duration with disease, is compared to the prevalent proportional hazards model, where the fundamental time scale is follow-up time. In certain cases the time of enrollment may coincide with another event (such as the initiation of treatment). This situation is also considered and its limitations highlighted. To illustrate the methodological ideas discussed in the paper, the analysis of data from an observational study of zidovudine (ZVD) in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is presented.
[1] R Brookmeyer,et al. Biases in prevalent cohorts. , 1987, Biometrics.
[2] Norman E. Breslow,et al. Multiplicative Models and Cohort Analysis , 1983 .
[3] L Ryan,et al. Survival analysis in natural history studies of disease. , 1989, Statistics in medicine.
[4] David R. Cox,et al. Regression models and life tables (with discussion , 1972 .
[5] E. B. Andersen,et al. Asymptotic Properties of Conditional Maximum‐Likelihood Estimators , 1970 .