A joint frailty model for recurrent and competing terminal events: Application to delirium in the ICU
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Publication year
2024Source
Statistics in Medicine, 43, 12, (2024), pp. 2389-2402ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Intensive Care
Journal title
Statistics in Medicine
Volume
vol. 43
Issue
iss. 12
Page start
p. 2389
Page end
p. 2402
Subject
Intensive Care - Radboud University Medical CenterAbstract
Joint models linking longitudinal biomarkers or recurrent event processes with a terminal event, for example, mortality, have been studied extensively. Motivated by studies of recurrent delirium events in patients receiving care in an intensive care unit (ICU), we devise a joint model for a recurrent event process and multiple terminal events. Being discharged alive from the ICU or experiencing mortality may be associated with a patient's hazard of delirium, violating the assumption of independent censoring. Moreover, the direction of the association between the hazards of delirium and mortality may be opposite of the direction of association between the hazards of delirium and ICU discharge. Hence treating either terminal event as independent censoring may bias inferences. We propose a competing joint model that uses a latent frailty to link a patient's recurrent and competing terminal event processes. We fit our model to data from a completed placebo-controlled clinical trial, which studied whether Haloperidol could prevent death and delirium among ICU patients. The clinical trial served as a foundation for a simulation study, in which we evaluate the properties, for example, bias and confidence interval coverage, of the competing joint model. As part of the simulation study, we demonstrate the shortcomings of using a joint model with a recurrent delirium process and a single terminal event to study delirium in the ICU. Lastly, we discuss limitations and possible extensions for the competing joint model. The competing joint model has been added to frailtypack, an R package for fitting an assortment of joint models.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [246326]
- Electronic publications [133968]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93294]
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