Statistical issues in survival analysis (Part XVV)

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Statistical issues in survival analysis (Part XVV)

December 20, 2023 In article that appeared in Statistics in Medicine, Denz et al explored different methods for modeling of adjusted survival curves especially in observational studies, which tend to have issues with confounding. The authors also brought in causal inference and discussed a counterfactual survival curve or confounder-adjusted survival curve, which represents the survival probability that would be observed in the target popoulation, if every person in the population had received treatment Z. Therefore, the average treatment effect becomes the difference or ratio between two treatment specific counterfactual survival curves. Randomized controlled clinical trials have been the gold standard for the estimation of these types of curves since randomization ensures the it ensures that the distribution of covariates does not differ between groups with respect to treatment. If there is no randomization, then one has to meet these assumptions: stable unit treatment value (survival time of one persons is independent of the treatment assignment of other people in the study), no unmeasured confounding (all relevant confounders have been measured), and the positivity assumption (each person has a probability greater than 0 and less than 1 for receiving the treatment, z). However, the authors had chosen to focus on the more difficult situation of observational studies. They focused on four methods used to adjust survival curves for measured baseline confounders when random right censoring is present. There were several methods which they chose to ignore for this paper, even the Targeted Maximum Likelihood Estimation based methods as they are only defined for discrete-time survival data, and as they mentioned, these methods have been


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