Abstract
We argue that well-informed patient-specific decision-making may be carried out as three consecutive tasks: (1) estimating key parameters of a statistical model, (2) using prognostic information to convert these parameters into clinically interpretable values, and (3) specifying joint utility functions to quantify risk–benefit trade-offs between clinical outcomes. Using the management of metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma as our motivating example, we explain the role of prognostic covariates that characterize between-patient heterogeneity in clinical outcomes. We show that explicitly specifying the joint utility of clinical outcomes provides a coherent basis for patient-specific decision-making.
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Msaouel, P., Lee, J., & Thall, P. F. (2021, June 1). Making patient-specific treatment decisions using prognostic variables and utilities of clinical outcomes. Cancers. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112741
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