A Bayesian approach to mixture cure models with spatial frailties for population-based cancer relative survival data
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3225768
DOI10.1002/cjs.10135zbMath1236.62157OpenAlexW2159685883MaRDI QIDQ3225768
Publication date: 22 March 2012
Published in: Canadian Journal of Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/cjs.10135
Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Bayesian inference (62F15) Medical applications (general) (92C50) Numerical analysis or methods applied to Markov chains (65C40) Estimation in survival analysis and censored data (62N02)
Related Items
Bayesian solution to the monotone likelihood in the standard mixture cure model ⋮ A flexible cure rate model for spatially correlated survival data based on generalized extreme value distribution and Gaussian process priors
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Accelerated hazards mixture cure model
- Space-varying regression models: specifications and simulation
- Bayesian modelling strategies for spatially varying regression coefficients: a multivariate perspective for multiple outcomes
- Multi-dimensional multivariate Gaussian Markov random fields with application to image processing
- Bayesian image restoration, with two applications in spatial statistics (with discussion)
- Inference from iterative simulation using multiple sequences
- A new condition for identifiability of finite mixture distributions
- A Parametric Estimate of the Standard Error of the Survival Rate
- On semiparametric transformation cure models
- Parametric Spatial Cure Rate Models for Interval‐Censored Time‐to‐Relapse Data
- A Bayesian Semiparametric Accelerated Failure Time Model
- Estimation in a Cox Proportional Hazards Cure Model
- A Nonparametric Mixture Model for Cure Rate Estimation
- Estimating and modeling the cure fraction in population-based cancer survival analysis
- Modelling geographically referenced survival data with a cure fraction
- Frailty modeling for spatially correlated survival data, with application to infant mortality in Minnesota