Restricted Mean Life with Covariates: Modification and Extension of a Useful Survival Analysis Method

From MaRDI portal
Publication:4216963


DOI10.2307/2670120zbMath1130.62362MaRDI QIDQ4216963

David M. Zucker

Publication date: 3 November 1998

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.2307/2670120


62N99: Survival analysis and censored data

62N02: Estimation in survival analysis and censored data


Related Items

Double‐Robust Semiparametric Estimator for Differences in Restricted Mean Lifetimes in Observational Studies, Assessing quantile prediction with censored quantile regression models, Estimating the average treatment effect on survival based on observational data and using partly conditional modeling, Regression Models for the Mean of the Quality‐of‐Life‐Adjusted Restricted Survival Time Using Pseudo‐Observations, Semiparametric methods to contrast gap time survival functions: Application to repeat kidney transplantation, Semiparametric inference on the absolute risk reduction and the restricted mean survival difference, Q-learning with censored data, Model selection for two-sample problems with right-censored data: an application of Cox model, Confidence bands for the difference between two median survival times as a function of covariates, Empirical likelihood confidence band for the difference of survival functions under proportional hazards model, Modeling restricted mean survival time under general censoring mechanisms, Regression analysis of restricted mean survival time based on pseudo-observations, Estimation of average causal effect using the restricted mean residual lifetime as effect measure, A predictive enrichment procedure to identify potential responders to a new therapy for randomized, comparative controlled clinical studies, Double Inverse-Weighted Estimation of Cumulative Treatment Effects Under Nonproportional Hazards and Dependent Censoring, Causal Inference on the Difference of the Restricted Mean Lifetime Between Two Groups, Estimating Differences in Restricted Mean Lifetime Using Observational Data Subject to Dependent Censoring, Comparison of Regression Curves with Censored Responses