Using a counting process method to impute censored follow-up time data

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Abstract

Censoring occurs when complete follow-up time information is unavailable for patients enrolled in a clinical study. The process is considered to be informative (non-ignorable) if the likelihood function for the model cannot be partitioned into a set of response parameters that are independent of the censoring parameters. In such cases, estimated survival time probabilities may be biased, prompting the need for special statistical methods to remedy the situation. The problem is especially salient when censoring occurs early in a study. In this paper, we describe a method to impute censored follow-up times using a counting process method.

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Efird, J. T., & Jindal, C. (2018). Using a counting process method to impute censored follow-up time data. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15040690

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