Statistics and Its Interface

Volume 7 (2014)

Number 4

Special Issue on Modern Bayesian Statistics (Part I)

Guest Editor: Ming-Hui Chen (University of Connecticut)

Joint models: when are treatment estimates improved?

Pages: 439 – 453

DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4310/SII.2014.v7.n4.a2

Authors

Laura A. Hatfield (Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.)

James S. Hodges (Division of Biostatistics, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minn., U.S.A.)

Bradley P. Carlin (Division of Biostatistics, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minn., U.S.A.)

Abstract

Treatments affect many aspects of disease; for example, a drug may improve symptoms, prolong survival, and cause serious side effects. A broader perspective on clinical effectiveness, considering multiple outcomes, requires analyses that account for relationships among outcomes. So-called joint modeling induces such relationships via shared parameters. Practical questions arise, including “When do we require a joint model?” and “How much do we gain by its use?” Motivated by these questions, we compare Gaussian joint models with shared latent parameters to separate models for each outcome individually. When we assume a single longitudinal measurement, known error variances, and no censoring, joint and separate treatment effect posteriors converge as the priors become improper. This result still holds when we add multiple longitudinal measurements and unknown error variance, but not when we make the prior informative for at least one treatment effect (longitudinal or survival). Joint models also improve inference under some censoring scenarios. Our results suggest that joint models are most useful when an information imbalance allows abundant information in one outcome to compensate for a paucity of information in another.

Keywords

joint longitudinal-survival modeling, Bayesian learning, multiple outcomes, bimodal posteriors

2010 Mathematics Subject Classification

Primary 62F15. Secondary 62H20.

Published 23 December 2014