Marginal structural models for partial exposure regimes.

Biostatistics

Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.

Published: January 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • ICU patients have a high risk of hospital-acquired infections due to their severe health conditions and invasive treatments, but the impact of these infections on mortality is not well understood.
  • The study aims to clarify this relationship using data from a National Surveillance Study of Nosocomial Infections, noting the challenges posed by time-dependent factors like mechanical ventilation.
  • A new class of marginal structural models is proposed to address these challenges by analyzing the effect of acquiring infections on mortality based on specific time points in the ICU, despite difficulties with hospital discharge and the statistical procedures involved.

Article Abstract

Intensive care unit (ICU) patients are highly susceptible to hospital-acquired infections due to their poor health and many invasive therapeutic treatments. The effect on mortality of acquiring such infections is, however, poorly understood. Our goal is to quantify this using data from the National Surveillance Study of Nosocomial Infections in ICUs (Belgium). This is challenging because of the presence of time-dependent confounders, such as mechanical ventilation, which lie on the causal path from infection to mortality. Standard statistical analyses may be severely misleading in such settings and have shown contradictory results. Inverse probability weighting for marginal structural models may instead be used but is not directly applicable because these models parameterize the effect of acquiring infection on a given day in ICU, versus "never" acquiring infection in ICU, and this is ill-defined when ICU discharge precedes that day. Additional complications arise from the informative censoring of the survival time by hospital discharge and the instability of the inverse weighting estimation procedure. We accommodate this by introducing a new class of marginal structural models for so-called partial exposure regimes. These describe the effect on the hazard of death of acquiring infection on a given day s, versus not acquiring infection "up to that day," had patients stayed in the ICU for at least s days.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/biostatistics/kxn012DOI Listing

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