학술논문

A new cure model that corrects for increased risk of non-cancer death: analysis of reliability and robustness, and application to real-life data
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Medical Research Methodology, Vol 23, Iss 1, Pp 1-19 (2023)
Subject
Cure model
Increased non-cancer mortality
Population-based data
Robustness
Reliability
Life tables
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Language
English
ISSN
1471-2288
Abstract
Abstract Background Non-cancer mortality in cancer patients may be higher than overall mortality in the general population due to a combination of factors, such as long-term adverse effects of treatments, and genetic, environmental or lifestyle-related factors. If so, conventional indicators may underestimate net survival and cure fraction. Our aim was to propose and evaluate a mixture cure survival model that takes into account the increased risk of non-cancer death for cancer patients. Methods We assessed the performance of a corrected mixture cure survival model derived from a conventional mixture cure model to estimate the cure fraction, the survival of uncured patients, and the increased risk of non-cancer death in two settings of net survival estimation, grouped life-table data and individual patients’ data. We measured the model’s performance in terms of bias, standard deviation of the estimates and coverage rate, using an extensive simulation study. This study included reliability assessments through violation of some of the model’s assumptions. We also applied the models to colon cancer data from the FRANCIM network. Results When the assumptions were satisfied, the corrected cure model provided unbiased estimates of parameters expressing the increased risk of non-cancer death, the cure fraction, and net survival in uncured patients. No major difference was found when the model was applied to individual or grouped data. The absolute bias was