ijsmr

International Journal of Statistics in Medical Research

A Contribution to the Genetic Epidemiology of Structured Populations
Pages 277-281
Alan E. Stark
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-6029.2015.04.03.5
Published: 19 August 2015


Abstract: A matingsystem, previously derived, which is more general than random mating is defined by the gene frequency q and a parameter F which measures divergence from Hardy-Weinberg proportions commonly used in genetic analysis. F can be viewed as the average coefficient of inbreeding in a population, the use emphasized here. Also it can characterize the variation in gene frequency in a stratified population. Taking q as fixed, the distribution of F over values admissible under the general mating system is derived by simulation. The mating system may be seen to be based on indifference as to choice of mates. This is the first object of the paper. The second uses the derived distribution of F to make a Bayesian estimate of F from a single sample of genotypic counts. Such an estimate has a number of uses in genetic analysis.

Keywords: Genetic Equilibrium, Hardy-Weinberg Law, Mate choice indifference, Inbreeding coefficient, Bayesian estimation.
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International Journal of Statistics in Medical Research

An Exponential Melanoma Trend Model
Pages 65-71
Örjan Hallberg
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-6029.2015.04.01.7
Published: 27 January 2015


Abstract: The present study investigated whether whole population exposure to radiation introduced by radio broadcasting and cell phone systems might explain recent increases in melanoma trends in Nordic countries or not. Trends were modeled using a single exponential function of the time each age group has been living in the new environment since an environmental change took place. The results clearly show that melanoma incidences started to increase exponentially by the time lived as an adult since 1955 and that a second trend break occurred in 1997. We searched best fit between calculated and reported age-standardized rates by parameter variation, and compared calculated with reported age-specific rates without further parameter adjustments. Local variations of breast cancer, lung cancer and all cancers together significantly correlated with corresponding local melanoma rates in Sweden. Increasing cancer trends since around 1997 seem related to a population covering environmental change effective from early 90’s. We conclude that this exponential trend model can be a useful tool in understanding responses to sudden environmental changes.

Keywords: Cancer, Melanoma, Cell phone, Speech time, Incidence, Trends.
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International Journal of Statistics in Medical Research

A Bayesian Shared Parameter Model for Analysing Longitudinal Skewed Responses with Nonignorable Dropout
Pages 103-115
M. Ganjali and T. Baghfalaki
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-6029.2014.03.02.4
Published: 30 April 2014Open Access


Abstract: When the nature of a data set comes from a skew distribution, the use of usual Gaussian mixed effect model can be unreliable. In recent years, skew-normal mixed effect models have been used frequently for longitudinal data modeling in many biomedical studies. These models are flexible for considering skewness of the longitudinal data. In this paper, a shared parameter model is considered for simultaneously analysing nonignorable missingness and skew longitudinal outcomes. A Bayesian approach using Markov Chain Monte Carlo is adopted for parameter estimation. Some simulation studies are performed to investigate the performance of the proposed methods. The proposed methods are applied for analyzing an AIDS data set, where CD4 count measurements are gathered as longitudinal outcomes. In these data CD4 counts measurements are severely skew. In application section, different structures of skew-normal distribution assumptions for random effects and errors are considered where deviance informationcriterion is used for model comparison.

Keywords: Bayesian approach, Longitudinal data, Markov Chain Monte Carlo, Missingness mechanism, Nonignorable missing data, Random effects model.

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International Journal of Statistics in Medical Research

An Independent and External Validation of the ACC NCDR Bleeding Risk Score among a National Multi-Site Community Hospital Registry of Cardiac Interventions
Pages 153-160
David R. Dobies, Kimberly R. Barber and Amanda L. Cohoon
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-6029.2014.03.02.9
Published: 14 May 2014Open Access


Abstract: Background: An accurate tool with good discrimination for bleeding would be useful to clinicians for improved management of all their patients. Bleeding risk models have been published but not externally validated in independent clinical dataset. We chose the NCDR PCI score to validate within a large, multi-site community datasets. The aim of the study was to determine the diagnostic utility of this bleeding risk score tool.

Methods: This is a large-scale retrospective analysis utilizing American College of Cardiology data from a 37-hospital health system. The central repository of PCI procedures between 6-1-2009 and 6-30-2012 was utilized to validate the NCDR PCI bleeding risk score (BRS) among 4693 patients. The primary endpoint was major bleeding. Discriminant analysis calculating the receiver operating characteristic curve was performed.

Results:There were 143 (3.0%) major bleeds. Mean bleeding risk score was 14.7 (range 3 – 42). Incidence of bleeding by risk category: low (0.5%), intermediate (1.7%), and high risk (7.6%). Patients given heparin had 113 (3.7%) major bleeds and those given bivalirudin had 30 (2.1%) major bleeds. Tool accuracy was poor to fair (AUC 0.78 heparin, 0.65 bivalirudin). Overall accuracy was 0.71 (CI: 0.66-0.76). Accuracy did not improve when confined to just the intermediate risk group (AUC 0.58; CI: 0.55-0.67).

Conclusion:Bleeding risk tools have low predictive value. Adjustment for anticoagulation use resulted in poor discrimination because bivalirudin differentially biases outcomes toward no bleeding. The current state of bleeding risk tools provides little support for diagnostic utility in regards to major bleeding and therefore have limited clinical applicability.

Keywords: Major bleeding, bleeding risk model, anticoagulant, percutaneous coronary intervention, cardiovascular.

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