An Augmented Likelihood Approach for the Discrete Proportional Hazards Model Using Auxiliary and Validated Outcome Data – with Application to HCHS/SOL Study
In large epidemiologic studies, self-reported outcomes are often used to record disease status more frequently than by gold standard diagnostic tests alone. While self-reported disease outcomes are easier to obtain than diagnostic test results, they are often prone to error. There has recently been interest in using error-prone, auxiliary outcomes to improve the efficiency of inference for discrete time-to-event analyses. We have developed a new augmented likelihood approach that incorporates auxiliary data into the analysis of gold standard time-to-event outcome, which can be considered when self-reported outcomes are available in addition to a gold standard endpoint. We conduct a numerical study to show how we can improve statistical efficiency by using the proposed method instead of standard approaches for interval-censored survival data that do not leverage auxiliary data. We also extended this method for the complex survey design setting so that it can be applied in our motivating data example. We apply this method to data from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos in order to assess the association between energy and protein intake and the risk of incident diabetes. In our application, we demonstrate how our method can be used in combination with regression calibration to additionally address the covariate measurement error in the self-reported diet.
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