Moving Beyond the Hazard Ratio in Quantifying the Between-Group Difference in Survival Analysis
Abstract
In a longitudinal clinical study to compare two groups, the primary end point is often the time to a specific event (eg, disease progression, death). The hazard ratio estimate is routinely used to empirically quantify the between-group difference under the assumption that the ratio of the two hazard functions is approximately constant over time. When this assumption is plausible, such a ratio estimate may capture the relative difference between...
Paper Details
Title
Moving Beyond the Hazard Ratio in Quantifying the Between-Group Difference in Survival Analysis
Published Date
Aug 1, 2014
Journal
Volume
32
Issue
22
Pages
2380 - 2385
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