Causal inference with a mediated proportional hazards regression model.

Commun Stat Simul Comput

Department of Public Health Sciences, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, 17033, USA.

Published: December 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • VanderWeele (2011) addresses causal mediation analysis in survival data with one mediator, focusing on both accelerated failure time and proportional hazards regression models, particularly when outcomes are rare.
  • The study highlights a limitation in VanderWeele’s approach, revealing that no simple formula exists for common outcomes in proportional hazards regression due to the baseline cumulative hazard function's behavior.
  • The authors propose two new methods that don't require rare outcomes, using numerical integration and simulation to estimate natural direct and indirect effects, validating their approach with data from the ASSESS-AKI Consortium.

Article Abstract

The natural direct and indirect effects in causal mediation analysis with survival data having one mediator is addressed by VanderWeele (2011) [1]. He derived an approach for (1) an accelerated failure time regression model in general cases and (2) a proportional hazards regression model when the time-to-event outcome is rare. If the outcome is not rare, then VanderWeele (2011) [1] did not derive a simple closed-form expression for the log-natural direct and log-natural indirect effects for the proportional hazards regression model because the baseline cumulative hazard function does not approach zero. We develop two approaches to extend VanderWeele's approach, in which the assumption of a rare outcome is not required. We obtain the natural direct and indirect effects for specific time points through numerical integration after we calculate the cumulative baseline hazard by (1) applying the Breslow method in the Cox proportional hazards regression model to estimate the unspecified cumulative baseline hazard; (2) assuming a piecewise constant baseline hazard model, yielding a parametric model, to estimate the baseline hazard and cumulative baseline hazard. We conduct simulation studies to compare our two approaches with other methods and illustrate our two approaches by applying them to data from the ASsessment, Serial Evaluation, and Subsequent Sequelae in Acute Kidney Injury (ASSESS-AKI) Consortium.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10760952PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03610918.2021.2014887DOI Listing

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