How to handle mortality when investigating length of hospital stay and time to clinical stability

被引:108
作者
Brock, Guy N. [1 ]
Barnes, Christopher [1 ]
Ramirez, Julio A. [2 ]
Myers, John [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Louisville, Dept Bioinformat & Biostat, Louisville, KY 40202 USA
[2] Univ Louisville, Dept Med, Div Infect Dis, Louisville, KY 40202 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED-PNEUMONIA; CARE-UNIT STAY; COMPETING RISKS; NONPARAMETRIC-ESTIMATION; PRINCIPAL STRATIFICATION; CUMULATIVE INCIDENCE; KAPLAN-MEIER; OUTCOMES; SUBDISTRIBUTION; SEVERITY;
D O I
10.1186/1471-2288-11-144
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Hospital length of stay (LOS) and time for a patient to reach clinical stability (TCS) have increasingly become important outcomes when investigating ways in which to combat Community Acquired Pneumonia (CAP). Difficulties arise when deciding how to handle in-hospital mortality. Ad-hoc approaches that are commonly used to handle time to event outcomes with mortality can give disparate results and provide conflicting conclusions based on the same data. To ensure compatibility among studies investigating these outcomes, this type of data should be handled in a consistent and appropriate fashion. Methods: Using both simulated data and data from the international Community Acquired Pneumonia Organization (CAPO) database, we evaluate two ad-hoc approaches for handling mortality when estimating the probability of hospital discharge and clinical stability: 1) restricting analysis to those patients who lived, and 2) assigning individuals who die the "worst" outcome (right-censoring them at the longest recorded LOS or TCS). Estimated probability distributions based on these approaches are compared with right-censoring the individuals who died at time of death (the complement of the Kaplan-Meier (KM) estimator), and treating death as a competing risk (the cumulative incidence estimator). Tests for differences in probability distributions based on the four methods are also contrasted. Results: The two ad-hoc approaches give different estimates of the probability of discharge and clinical stability. Analysis restricted to patients who survived is conceptually problematic, as estimation is conditioned on events that happen at a future time. Estimation based on assigning those patients who died the worst outcome (longest LOS and TCS) coincides with the complement of the KM estimator based on the subdistribution hazard, which has been previously shown to be equivalent to the cumulative incidence estimator. However, in either case the time to in-hospital mortality is ignored, preventing simultaneous assessment of patient mortality in addition to LOS and/or TCS. The power to detect differences in underlying hazards of discharge between patient populations differs for test statistics based on the four approaches, and depends on the underlying hazard ratio of mortality between the patient groups. Conclusions: Treating death as a competing risk gives estimators which address the clinical questions of interest, and allows for simultaneous modelling of both in-hospital mortality and TCS/LOS. This article advocates treating mortality as a competing risk when investigating other time related outcomes.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]  
AALEN OO, 1978, SCAND J STAT, V5, P141
[2]   Understanding competing risks: a simulation point of view [J].
Allignol, Arthur ;
Schumacher, Martin ;
Wanner, Christoph ;
Drechsler, Christiane ;
Beyersmann, Jan .
BMC MEDICAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, 2011, 11
[3]  
Allignol A, 2011, J STAT SOFTW, V38, P1
[4]   A Note on Variance Estimation of the Aalen-Johansen Estimator of the Cumulative Incidence Function in Competing Risks, with a View towards Left-Truncated Data [J].
Allignol, Arthur ;
Schumacher, Martin ;
Beyersmann, Jan .
BIOMETRICAL JOURNAL, 2010, 52 (01) :126-137
[5]  
ANDERSON PK, 2010, INTERPRETABILITY IMP
[6]  
[Anonymous], 2011, R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing
[7]  
Arnold F, 2006, INT J TUBERC LUNG D, V10, P739
[8]   A worldwide perspective of atypical pathogens in community-acquired pneumonia [J].
Arnold, Forest W. ;
Summersgill, James T. ;
Lajoie, Andrew S. ;
Peyrani, Paula ;
Marrie, Thomas J. ;
Rossi, Paolo ;
Blasi, Francesco ;
Fernandez, Patricia ;
File, Thomas M., Jr. ;
Rello, Jordi ;
Menendez, Rosario ;
Marzoratti, Lucia ;
Luna, Carlos M. ;
Ramirez, Julio A. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2007, 175 (10) :1086-1093
[9]   Predictive accuracy of the pneumonia severity index vs CRB-65 for time to clinical stability: Results from the Community-Acquired Pneumonia Organization (CAPO) International Cohort Study [J].
Arnold, Forest W. ;
Brock, Guy N. ;
Peyrani, Paula ;
Rodriguez, Eduardo L. ;
Diaz, Alejandro A. ;
Rossi, Paolo ;
Ramirez, Julio A. .
RESPIRATORY MEDICINE, 2010, 104 (11) :1736-1743
[10]   Improving Outcomes in Elderly Patients With Community-Acquired Pneumonia by Adhering to National Guidelines Community-Acquired Pneumonia Organization International Cohort Study Results [J].
Arnold, Forest W. ;
LaJoie, A. Scott ;
Brock, Guy N. ;
Peyrani, Paula ;
Rello, Jordi ;
Menendez, Rosario ;
Lopardo, Gustavo ;
Torres, Antoni ;
Rossi, Paolo ;
Ramirez, Julio A. .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2009, 169 (16) :1515-1524