Volume 55, Issue 4 pp. 1108-1113

The Two-Sample Problem with Induced Dependent Censorship

Yijian Huang

Yijian Huang

Division of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 1100 Fairview Avenue N, MP-900, P.O. Box 19024, Seattle, Washington 98109, U.S.A. email: [email protected]

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First published: 25 May 2004
Citations: 9

Abstract

Summary. Induced dependent censorship is a general phenomenon in health service evaluation studies in which a measure such as quality-adjusted survival time or lifetime medical cost is of interest. We investigate the two-sample problem and propose two classes of nonparametric tests. Based on consistent estimation of the survival function for each sample, the two classes of test statistics examine the cumulative weighted difference in hazard functions and in survival functions. We derive a unified asymptotic null distribution theory and inference procedure. The tests are applied to trial V of the International Breast Cancer Study Group and show that long duration chemotherapy significantly improves time without symptoms of disease and toxicity of treatment as compared with the short duration treatment. Simulation studies demonstrate that the proposed tests, with a wide range of weight choices, perform well under moderate sample sizes.

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