4.5 Article

The polytomous discrimination index for prediction involving multistate processes under intermittent observation

期刊

STATISTICS IN MEDICINE
卷 41, 期 19, 页码 3661-3678

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/sim.9441

关键词

classification; coarsening; discrimination; intermittent observation; multistate processes; predictive model; risk scores

资金

  1. National Cancer Institute [U01 CA195547]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2017-04207]
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FRN 159834]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

With the increasing importance of predictive modeling in health research, there is a need for rigorous methods to assess predictive accuracy. This paper addresses the problem of evaluating the accuracy of predictive models for nominal outcomes when outcome data are coarsened at random. Two scenarios are considered: multinomial response modeled by polytomous logistic regression, and a multistate disease process where class membership is unknown due to intermittent observation. The proposed extension to the polytomous discrimination index is used to evaluate the predictive accuracy in a study involving patients with arthritis.
With the increasing importance of predictive modeling in health research comes the need for methods to rigorously assess predictive accuracy. We consider the problem of evaluating the accuracy of predictive models for nominal outcomes when outcome data are coarsened at random. We first consider the problem in the context of a multinomial response modeled by polytomous logistic regression. Attention is then directed to the motivating setting in which class membership corresponds to the state occupied in a multistate disease process at a time horizon of interest. Here, class (state) membership may be unknown at the time horizon since disease processes are under intermittent observation. We propose a novel extension to the polytomous discrimination index to address this and evaluate the predictive accuracy of an intensity-based model in the context of a study involving patients with arthritis from a registry at the University of Toronto Centre for Prognosis Studies in Rheumatic Diseases.

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