Frailty Models for Familial Risk With Application to Breast Cancer
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5406344
DOI10.1080/01621459.2013.818001zbMath1288.62159OpenAlexW1987010117WikidataQ37658464 ScholiaQ37658464MaRDI QIDQ5406344
No author found.
Publication date: 1 April 2014
Published in: Journal of the American Statistical Association (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://europepmc.org/articles/pmc3963469
Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Medical applications (general) (92C50)
Related Items (4)
Robust logistic regression of family data in the presence of missing genotypes ⋮ Analysis of secondary failure time responses in studies with response‐dependent sampling schemes ⋮ Nonparametric Adjustment for Measurement Error in Time-to-Event Data: Application to Risk Prediction Models ⋮ Calibrated predictions for multivariate competing risks models
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Missing genetic information in case-control family data with general semi-parametric shared frailty model
- Case-control survival analysis with a general semiparametric shared frailty model: A pseudo full likelihood approach
- Uniform consistency of the kernel conditional Kaplan-Meier estimate
- Modeling survival data: extending the Cox model
- Analysis of multivariate survival data
- The frailty model.
- Event-based analysis times for randomised clinical trials
- Analysis of Survival Data from Case-Control Family Studies
- Prospective survival analysis with a general semiparametric shared frailty model: A pseudo full likelihood approach
- Semiparametric Estimation of Marginal Hazard Function from Case-Control Family Studies
- Calibrating parametric subject-specific risk estimation
- Case–Control and Case‐Only Designs with Genotype and Family History Data: Estimating Relative Risk, Residual Familial Aggregation, and Cumulative Risk
- Effect of Misreported Family History on Mendelian Mutation Prediction Models
- BayesMendel: an R Environment for Mendelian Risk Prediction
- A Frailty‐Model‐Based Approach to Estimating the Age‐Dependent Penetrance Function of Candidate Genes Using Population‐Based Case‐Control Study Designs: An Application to Data on the BRCA1 Gene
This page was built for publication: Frailty Models for Familial Risk With Application to Breast Cancer