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Clinical decision-making often relies on a subject's absolute risk of a disease event of interest. However, in a frail population, competing risk events may preclude the occurrence of the event of interest. We review competing-risk regression models with a view toward predictive modeling. We show how measures of prognostic performance (such as calibration and discrimination) can be adapted to the competing-risks setting. An example of coronary heart disease (CHD) prediction in women aged 55-90 years in the Rotterdam study is used to illustrate the proposed methods, and to compare the Fine and Gray regression model to 2 alternative approaches: (1) a standard Cox survival model, which ignores the competing risk of non-CHD death, and (2) a cause-specific hazards model, which combines proportional hazards models for the event of interest and the competing event. The Fine and Gray model and the cause-specific hazards model perform similarly. However, the standard Cox model substantially overestimates 10-year risk of CHD; it classifies 18% of the individuals as high risk (>20%), compared with only 8% according to the Fine and Gray model. We conclude that competing risks have to be considered explicitly in frail populations such as the elderly.
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Marcel Wolbers
Roche (Switzerland)
Michael Koller
University Hospital Regensburg
Jacqueline C.M. Witteman
Preventive Cardiology
Epidemiology
Erasmus University Rotterdam
Erasmus MC
University Hospital of Basel
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Wolbers et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d90321f544bba627bede35 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1097/ede.0b013e3181a39056
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