A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study

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Standard

A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study. / Petersen, Liselotte; Sørensen, Thorkild I A; Andersen, Per Kragh.

I: Statistics in Medicine, Bind 29, Nr. 7-8, 2010, s. 924-31.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Petersen, L, Sørensen, TIA & Andersen, PK 2010, 'A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study', Statistics in Medicine, bind 29, nr. 7-8, s. 924-31. https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.3729

APA

Petersen, L., Sørensen, T. I. A., & Andersen, P. K. (2010). A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study. Statistics in Medicine, 29(7-8), 924-31. https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.3729

Vancouver

Petersen L, Sørensen TIA, Andersen PK. A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study. Statistics in Medicine. 2010;29(7-8):924-31. https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.3729

Author

Petersen, Liselotte ; Sørensen, Thorkild I A ; Andersen, Per Kragh. / A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study. I: Statistics in Medicine. 2010 ; Bind 29, Nr. 7-8. s. 924-31.

Bibtex

@article{6d7cb1d072e511df928f000ea68e967b,
title = "A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study",
abstract = "The Danish adoption register contains data on the 12 301 Danish nonfamilial adoptions during 1924-1947. From that register a case-cohort sample was selected consisting of all case adoptees, that is those adoptees dying before age 70 years, and a random sample of 1683 adoptees. The survival data of their biological and adoptive parents were collected with the purpose of studying the association of survival between the adoptee and his/her biological or adoptive parents. Motivated by this study, we explored how to make inference in a shared frailty model for case-cohort data. Our approach was to use inverse probability weighting to account for the sampling in a conditional, shared frailty Poisson model and to use the robust variance estimator proposed by Moger et al. (Statist. Med. 2008; 27:1062-1074).To explore the performance of the estimation procedure, a simulation study was conducted. We studied situations with three types of covariates: one with equal values between families (e.g. generation in parent-offspring pairs), an individual covariate, and one with equal values within each family (e.g. family size).The estimation of the frailty parameter tended to be unbiased; however, a small bias was seen for rare causes of death. The estimation of variance was unbiased when covariates were individual or equal within families, but some overestimation was seen when the covariate was equal between families. As in the earlier analyses, we found that there was a moderate genetic influence on the mortality rate, especially from all causes of death and vascular causes, and we found no effect of familial environment.",
author = "Liselotte Petersen and S{\o}rensen, {Thorkild I A} and Andersen, {Per Kragh}",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1002/sim.3729",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "924--31",
journal = "Statistics in Medicine",
issn = "0277-6715",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons Ltd",
number = "7-8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A shared frailty model for case-cohort samples: parent and offspring relations in an adoption study

AU - Petersen, Liselotte

AU - Sørensen, Thorkild I A

AU - Andersen, Per Kragh

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - The Danish adoption register contains data on the 12 301 Danish nonfamilial adoptions during 1924-1947. From that register a case-cohort sample was selected consisting of all case adoptees, that is those adoptees dying before age 70 years, and a random sample of 1683 adoptees. The survival data of their biological and adoptive parents were collected with the purpose of studying the association of survival between the adoptee and his/her biological or adoptive parents. Motivated by this study, we explored how to make inference in a shared frailty model for case-cohort data. Our approach was to use inverse probability weighting to account for the sampling in a conditional, shared frailty Poisson model and to use the robust variance estimator proposed by Moger et al. (Statist. Med. 2008; 27:1062-1074).To explore the performance of the estimation procedure, a simulation study was conducted. We studied situations with three types of covariates: one with equal values between families (e.g. generation in parent-offspring pairs), an individual covariate, and one with equal values within each family (e.g. family size).The estimation of the frailty parameter tended to be unbiased; however, a small bias was seen for rare causes of death. The estimation of variance was unbiased when covariates were individual or equal within families, but some overestimation was seen when the covariate was equal between families. As in the earlier analyses, we found that there was a moderate genetic influence on the mortality rate, especially from all causes of death and vascular causes, and we found no effect of familial environment.

AB - The Danish adoption register contains data on the 12 301 Danish nonfamilial adoptions during 1924-1947. From that register a case-cohort sample was selected consisting of all case adoptees, that is those adoptees dying before age 70 years, and a random sample of 1683 adoptees. The survival data of their biological and adoptive parents were collected with the purpose of studying the association of survival between the adoptee and his/her biological or adoptive parents. Motivated by this study, we explored how to make inference in a shared frailty model for case-cohort data. Our approach was to use inverse probability weighting to account for the sampling in a conditional, shared frailty Poisson model and to use the robust variance estimator proposed by Moger et al. (Statist. Med. 2008; 27:1062-1074).To explore the performance of the estimation procedure, a simulation study was conducted. We studied situations with three types of covariates: one with equal values between families (e.g. generation in parent-offspring pairs), an individual covariate, and one with equal values within each family (e.g. family size).The estimation of the frailty parameter tended to be unbiased; however, a small bias was seen for rare causes of death. The estimation of variance was unbiased when covariates were individual or equal within families, but some overestimation was seen when the covariate was equal between families. As in the earlier analyses, we found that there was a moderate genetic influence on the mortality rate, especially from all causes of death and vascular causes, and we found no effect of familial environment.

U2 - 10.1002/sim.3729

DO - 10.1002/sim.3729

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 20213722

VL - 29

SP - 924

EP - 931

JO - Statistics in Medicine

JF - Statistics in Medicine

SN - 0277-6715

IS - 7-8

ER -

ID: 20196529