He, Hua Tang, Wan Kelly, Tanika Li, Shengxu He, Jiang
Published in
Statistical methods in medical research
Measures of substance concentration in urine, serum or other biological matrices often have an assay limit of detection. When concentration levels fall below the limit, the exact measures cannot be obtained. Instead, the measures are censored as only partial information that the levels are under the limit is known. Assuming the concentration levels...
Lee, Chun Yin Chen, Xuerong Lam, Kwok Fai
Published in
Statistics in medicine
Models with change-point in covariates have wide applications in cancer research with the response being the time to a certain event. A Cox model with change-point in covariate is considered at which the pattern of the change-point effects can be flexibly specified. To test for the existence of the change-point effects, three statistical tests, nam...
mccabe, brendan p.m. skeels, christopher l.
The Poisson regression model remains an important tool in the econometric analysis of count data. In a pioneering contribution to the econometric analysis of such models, Lung-Fei Lee presented a specification test for a Poisson model against a broad class of discrete distributions sometimes called the Katz family. Two members of this alternative c...
Wu, Weimiao Wang, Zhong Xu, Ke Zhang, Xinyu Amei, Amei Gelernter, Joel Zhao, Hongyu Justice, Amy C. Wang, Zuoheng
Published in
Genetics
Longitudinal phenotypes have been increasingly available in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and electronic health record-based studies for identification of genetic variants that influence complex traits over time. For longitudinal binary data, there remain significant challenges in gene mapping, including misspecification of the model for p...
Segalas, Corentin Amieva, Hélène Jacqmin-Gadda, Hélène
Published in
Statistics in medicine
In biomedical research, random changepoint mixed models are used to take into account an individual breakpoint in a biomarker trajectory. This may be observed in the cognitive decline measured by psychometric tests in the prediagnosis phase of Alzheimer's disease. The existence, intensity and duration of this accelerated decline can depend on indiv...
Diao, Guoqing Liu, Guanghan F Zeng, Donglin Wang, William Tan, Xianming Heyse, Joseph F Ibrahim, Joseph G
Published in
Biometrics
It is an important and yet challenging task to identify true signals from many adverse events that may be reported during the course of a clinical trial. One unique feature of drug safety data from clinical trials, unlike data from post-marketing spontaneous reporting, is that many types of adverse events are reported by only very few patients lead...
Jiang, Shu Cook, Richard J
Published in
Statistics in medicine
A mixture model is described, which accommodates different Markov processes governing disease progression in a finite set of latent classes. We give special attention to the setting in which individuals are examined intermittently and transition times are consequently interval censored. A score test is developed to identify genetic markers associat...
Qiu, Shi-Fang Zeng, Xiao-Song Tang, Man-Lai Poon, Wai-Yin
Published in
Statistical methods in medical research
Double sampling is usually applied to collect necessary information for situations in which an infallible classifier is available for validating a subset of the sample that has already been classified by a fallible classifier. Inference procedures have previously been developed based on the partially validated data obtained by the double-sampling p...
Saad, Mohamad Wijsman, Ellen M
Published in
Briefings in bioinformatics
Genome-wide association studies have been an important approach used to localize trait loci, with primary focus on common variants. The multiple rare variant-common disease hypothesis may explain the missing heritability remaining after accounting for identified common variants. Advances of sequencing technologies with their decreasing costs, coupl...
Tang, Yi Tang, Wan
Published in
Statistical methods in medical research
Excessive zeros are common in practice and may cause overdispersion and invalidate inferences when fitting Poisson regression models. Zero-inflated Poisson regression models may be applied if there are inflated zeros; however, it is desirable to test if there are inflated zeros before such zero-inflated Poisson models are applied. Assuming a consta...