Spearman‐like correlation measure adjusting for covariates in bivariate survival data

Author:

Eden Svetlana K.1ORCID,Li Chun2,Shepherd Bryan E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee USA

2. Department of Population and Public Health Sciences University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

Abstract

AbstractWe propose an extension of Spearman's correlation for censored continuous and discrete data that permits covariate adjustment. Previously proposed nonparametric and semiparametric Spearman's correlation estimators require either nonparametric estimation of the bivariate survival surface or parametric assumptions about the dependence structure. In practice, nonparametric estimation of the bivariate survival surface is difficult, and parametric assumptions about the correlation structure may not be satisfied. Therefore, we propose a method that requires neither and uses only the marginal survival distributions. Our method estimates the correlation of probability‐scale residuals, which has been shown to equal Spearman's correlation when there is no censoring. Because this method relies only on marginal distributions, it tends to be less variable than the previously suggested nonparametric estimators, and the confidence intervals are easily constructed. Although under censoring, it is biased for Spearman's correlation as our simulations show, it performs well under moderate censoring, with a smaller mean squared error than nonparametric approaches. We also extend it to partial (adjusted), conditional, and partial‐conditional correlation, which makes it particularly relevant for practical applications. We apply our method to estimate the correlation between time to viral failure and time to regimen change in a multisite cohort of persons living with HIV in Latin America.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty,General Medicine,Statistics and Probability

Reference40 articles.

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