On the Reliability of Machine Learning Models for Survival Analysis When Cure Is a Possibility

Author:

Ezquerro Ana1ORCID,Cancela Brais2ORCID,López-Cheda Ana3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Informatics, University of A Coruña, 15071 A Coruña, Spain

2. CITIC, LIDIA Group, Department of Computer Science, University of A Coruña, 15071 A Coruña, Spain

3. CITIC, MODES Group, Department of Mathematics, University of A Coruña, 15071 A Coruña, Spain

Abstract

In classical survival analysis, it is assumed that all the individuals will experience the event of interest. However, if there is a proportion of subjects who will never experience the event, then a standard survival approach is not appropriate, and cure models should be considered instead. This paper deals with the problem of adapting a machine learning approach for classical survival analysis to a situation when cure (i.e., not suffering the event) is a possibility. Specifically, a brief review of cure models and recent machine learning methodologies is presented, and an adaptation of machine learning approaches to account for cured individuals is introduced. In order to validate the proposed methods, we present an extensive simulation study in which we compare the performance of the adapted machine learning algorithms with existing cure models. The results show the good behavior of the semiparametric or the nonparametric approaches, depending on the simulated scenario. The practical utility of the methodology is showcased through two real-world dataset illustrations. In the first one, the results show the gain of using the nonparametric mixture cure model approach. In the second example, the results show the poor performance of some machine learning methods for small sample sizes.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Mathematics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Computer Science (miscellaneous)

Reference103 articles.

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3. Cure models in survival analysis;Amico;Ann. Rev. Stat. Appl.,2018

4. Cure models to estimate time until hospitalization due to COVID-19;Cao;Appl. Intell.,2022

5. Peng, Y., and Yu, B. (2021). Cure Models. Methods, Applications, and Implementation, Chapman and Hall/CRC Press.

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