knitr::opts_chunk$set(
  collapse = TRUE,
  comment = "#>",
  fig.path = "README-"
)

joineRmeta

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The joineRmeta package implements methods to analyse multi-study joint data consisting of a single continuous longitudinal outcome, and a single possible censored time-to-event outcome. The modelling framework for the longitudinal data is a linear mixed effects model (Laird and Ware, 1982). The modelling framework for the time-to-event outcome is a Cox proportional hazards model with an unspecified baseline hazard (Cox, 1972). The longitudinal and time-to-event sub-model are linked through an association structure. Currently only the random effects only proportional association is available (see Gould et al, 2015). The methodology used to fit the model is described in Henderson et al (2000) and Wulfsohn and Tsiatis (1997).

The joineRmeta package contains methods to perform the second stage of a two stage meta-analysis (MA) of study specific joint modelling fits, and one stage MA of multi-study joint data where between study heterogeneity can be accounted for using interaction terms with study membership variables, study level random effects, or baseline hazard stratified by study. The package also contains plotting and simulation functions.

Example

The joineRmeta package contains several simulated datasets. One of these is simdat which contains data from 5 studies, each containing 500 simulated individuals. This data first must be transformed into a joint data object

library(joineRmeta)
data(simdat)
jointdat<-tojointdata(longitudinal = simdat$longitudinal, 
  survival = simdat$survival, id = "id", longoutcome = "Y", 
  timevarying = c("time","ltime"), survtime = "survtime", cens = "cens",
  time = "time")
jointdat$baseline$study <- as.factor(jointdat$baseline$study)
jointdat$baseline$treat <- as.factor(jointdat$baseline$treat)

Using the data held in the jointdata object jointdat we can then fit a one stage multi-study joint model.

fit <- jointmeta1(data = jointdat, 
                  long.formula = Y ~ 1 + time + treat, 
                  long.rand.ind = c("int", "time"), 
                  long.rand.stud = "treat",
                  sharingstrct = "randprop",
                  surv.formula = Surv(survtime, cens) ~ treat, 
                  study.name = "study", 
                  strat = T)
summary(fit)

Full details on the data and the functions are provided in the help documentation and package vignette. The purpose of this code is to simply illustrate the model fitting.

Funding

This work was supported by the Health eResearch Centre (HeRC) funded by the Medical Research Council Grant MR/K006665/1.

Using the latest developmental version

To install the latest developmental version, you will need the R package devtools and to run the following code

library('devtools')
install_github('mesudell/joineRmeta', build_vignettes = FALSE)

References

  1. Cox DR. Regression models and life-tables. J R Stat Soc Ser B Stat Methodol. 1972; 34(2): 187-220.

  2. Gould LA, Boye M, Bois F, et al. Joint modeling of survival and longitudinal non-survival data: current methods and issues. Report of the DIA Bayesian joint modeling working group. Stat Med. 2015; 34(14): 2181-2195.

  3. Henderson R, Diggle PJ, Dobson A. Joint modelling of longitudinal measurements and event time data. Biostatistics. 2000; 1(4): 465-480.

  4. Laird NM, Ware JH. Random-effects models for longitudinal data. Biometrics. 1982; 38(4): 963-974.

  5. Wulfsohn MS, Tsiatis AA. A joint model for survival and longitudinal data measured with error. Biometrics. 1997; 53(1): 330-339.



mesudell/joineRmeta documentation built on Jan. 24, 2020, 6:06 p.m.