Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4949310 Computational Statistics & Data Analysis 2017 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Vascular access complications have been the major cause of excessive morbidity and mortality in the dialysis population. They also account for a large portion of hospitalization for dialysis patients and are a main contributor to the high dialysis care cost. Despite the Fistula First Initiative, the majority of patients initiate dialysis with a central venous catheter which is associated with poor outcomes. In this paper we investigate whether switching from a central venous catheter to an arteriovenous fistula sooner is associated with smaller hospitalization rate. We propose a flexible model for time-varying switching effect while accounting for trend over calendar time, trend over time on dialysis and time-varying effects of covariates. We model all unknown functions nonparametrically using local linear smoothers and estimate them using weighted local quasi-likelihood. We show that the proposed estimators have the desirable large-sample properties and excellent performance in simulations. Application of the proposed method to a real data set indicates that hospitalization rate is smaller when patients switch from a central venous catheter to an arteriovenous fistula sooner. The proposed methods are general which are applicable to other situations with treatment switching.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics
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