Joint modeling of survival and longitudinal non-survival data: current methods and issues. Report of the DIA Bayesian joint modeling working group.

TitleJoint modeling of survival and longitudinal non-survival data: current methods and issues. Report of the DIA Bayesian joint modeling working group.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsA Gould, Lawrence, Mark Ernest Boye, Michael J. Crowther, Joseph G. Ibrahim, George Quartey, Sandrine Micallef, and Frederic Y. Bois
JournalStat Med
Volume34
Issue14
Pagination2181-95
Date Published2015 Jun 30
ISSN1097-0258
KeywordsAnti-HIV Agents, Bayes Theorem, Biomarkers, Pharmacological, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Clinical Trials as Topic, Drug Design, Epidemiologic Research Design, Graft Rejection, HIV Infections, Humans, Kidney Transplantation, Longitudinal Studies, Models, Statistical, Proportional Hazards Models, Quality of Life, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic, Software, Survival Analysis, Viral Load
Abstract

Explicitly modeling underlying relationships between a survival endpoint and processes that generate longitudinal measured or reported outcomes potentially could improve the efficiency of clinical trials and provide greater insight into the various dimensions of the clinical effect of interventions included in the trials. Various strategies have been proposed for using longitudinal findings to elucidate intervention effects on clinical outcomes such as survival. The application of specifically Bayesian approaches for constructing models that address longitudinal and survival outcomes explicitly has been recently addressed in the literature. We review currently available methods for carrying out joint analyses, including issues of implementation and interpretation, identify software tools that can be used to carry out the necessary calculations, and review applications of the methodology.

DOI10.1002/sim.6141
Alternate JournalStat Med
Original PublicationJoint modeling of survival and longitudinal non-survival data: current methods and issues. Report of the DIA Bayesian joint modeling working group.
PubMed ID24634327
PubMed Central IDPMC4677775
Grant ListDRF-2012-05-409 / DH_ / Department of Health / United Kingdom
P01 CA142538 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
Project: