Exploring causal mechanisms and quantifying direct and indirect effects using a joint modeling approach for recurrent and terminal events

Author:

Niu Fang1,Zheng Cheng1ORCID,Liu Lei2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska USA

2. Division of Biostatistics Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis Missouri USA

Abstract

AbstractRecurrent events are commonly encountered in biomedical studies. In many situations, there exist terminal events, such as death, which are potentially related to the recurrent events. Joint models of recurrent and terminal events have been proposed to address the correlation between recurrent events and terminal events. However, there is a dearth of suitable methods to rigorously investigate the causal mechanisms between specific exposures, recurrent events, and terminal events. For example, it is of interest to know how much of the total effect of the primary exposure of interest on the terminal event is through the recurrent events, and whether preventing recurrent event occurrences could lead to better overall survival. In this work, we propose a formal causal mediation analysis method to compute the natural direct and indirect effects. A novel joint modeling approach is used to take the recurrent event process as the mediator and the survival endpoint as the outcome. This new joint modeling approach allows us to relax the commonly used “sequential ignorability” assumption. Simulation studies show that our new model has good finite sample performance in estimating both model parameters and mediation effects. We apply our method to an AIDS study to evaluate how much of the comparative effectiveness of the two treatments and the effect of CD4 counts on the overall survival are mediated by recurrent opportunistic infections.

Funder

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Statistics and Probability,Epidemiology

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