Average Cause-Specific Hazard: A Censoring-Invariant Measure of Event Burden Under Competing Risks
Abstract
Competing events are common in clinical and epidemiologic studies, including semi-competing risks in which a terminal event such as death may follow a nonfatal event but also competes with it beforehand.
Standard summaries include the cumulative incidence function (CIF) and the incidence rate (IR), defined as the number of observed events divided by observed event-free person-time.
With competing events, the naive IR generally depends on the censoring-time distribution unless intensities are constant.
We propose the Average Cause-Specific Hazard (ACSH), a survival-weighted rate per event-free person-time that preserves the interpretation of an incidence rate and is defined purely from the event-time distribution, without involving the censoring-time distribution.
We develop nonparametric estimation and inference for ACSH and, for two-sample comparisons, introduce ACSH differences and ratios that provide interpretable contrasts without requiring a strong model assumption between two groups.
Simulation studies examine the finite-sample performance, and an analysis of the CANVAS trial illustrates the proposed methods.
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