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Markov transition model to dementia with death as a competing event
Affiliation:1. Department No. 2 of Respiratory Medicine, Beijing Children''s Hospital Affiliated to Capital Medical University, Beijing, People''s Republic of China;2. Department No. 1 of Respiratory Medicine, Beijing Children''s Hospital Affiliated to Capital Medical University, Beijing, People''s Republic of China;3. Department of Sleep Center, Beijing Children''s Hospital Affiliated to Capital Medical University, Beijing, People''s Republic of China
Abstract:This study evaluates the effect of death as a competing event to the development of dementia in a longitudinal study of the cognitive status of elderly subjects. A multi-state Markov model with three transient states: intact cognition, mild cognitive impairment (M.C.I.) and global impairment (G.I.) and one absorbing state: dementia is used to model the cognitive panel data; transitions among states depend on four covariates age, education, prior state (intact cognition, or M.C.I., or G.I.) and the presence/absence of an apolipoprotein E-4 allele (APOE4). A Weibull model and a Cox proportional hazards (Cox PH) model are used to fit the survival from death based on age at entry and the APOE4 status. A shared random effect correlates this survival time with the transition model. Simulation studies determine the sensitivity of the maximum likelihood estimates to the violations of the Weibull and Cox PH model assumptions. Results are illustrated with an application to the Nun Study, a longitudinal cohort of 672 participants 75+ years of age at baseline and followed longitudinally with up to ten cognitive assessments per nun.
Keywords:Multi-state Markov chain  Competing event  Weibull survival model  Cox proportional hazards model  Shared random effect  Nun Study
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