Addressing Extreme Propensity Scores in Estimating Counterfactual Survival Functions via the Overlap Weights
The inverse probability weighting approach is popular for evaluating treatment effects in observational studies, but extreme propensity scores could bias the estimator and induce excessive variance. Recently, the overlap weighting approach has been proposed to alleviate this problem, which smoothly down-weighs the subjects with extreme propensity scores. Although advantages of overlap weighting have been extensively demonstrated in literature with continuous and binary outcomes, research on its performance with time-to-event or survival outcomes is limited. In this article, we propose two weighting estimators that combine propensity score weighting and inverse probability of censoring weighting to estimate the counterfactual survival functions. These estimators are applicable to the general class of balancing weights, which includes inverse probability weighting, trimming, and overlap weighting as special cases. We conduct simulations to examine the empirical performance of these estimators with different weighting schemes in terms of bias, variance, and 95 between treatment groups and censoring rate. We demonstrate that overlap weighting consistently outperforms inverse probability weighting and associated trimming methods in bias, variance, and coverage for time-to-event outcomes, and the advantages increase as the degree of covariate overlap between the treatment groups decreases.
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