Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Publication:
Flexible modelling of risk factors on the incidence of pneumonia in young children in South Africa using piece-wise exponential additive mixed modelling

Ramjith, J.
Roes, K.C.B.
Zar, H.J.
Jonker, M.A.
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
Introduction: Recurrent episodes of pneumonia are frequently modeled using extensions of the Cox proportional hazards model with the underlying assumption of time-constant relative risks measured by the hazard ratio. We aim to relax this assumption in a study on the effect of factors on the evolution of pneumonia incidence over time based on data from a South African birth cohort study, the Drakenstein child health study. Methods: We describe and apply two models: a time-constant and a time-varying relative effects model in a piece-wise exponential additive mixed model's framework for recurrent events. A more complex model that fits in the same framework is applied to study the continuously measured seasonal effects. Results: We find that several risk factors (male sex, preterm birth, low birthweight, lower socioeconomic status, lower maternal education and maternal cigarette smoking) have strong relative effects that are persistent across time. When time-varying effects are allowed in the model, HIV exposure status (HIV exposed & uninfected versus HIV unexposed) shows a strong relative effect for younger children, but this effect weakens as children grow older, with a null effect reached from about 15 months. Weight-for-length at birth shows a time increasing relative effect. We also find that children born in the summer have a much higher risk of pneumonia in the 3-to-8-month age period compared with children born in winter. Conclusion: This work highlights the usefulness of flexible modelling tools in recurrent events models. It avoids stringent assumptions and allows estimation and visualization of absolute and relative risks over time of key factors associated with incidence of pneumonia in young children, providing new perspectives on the role of risk factors such HIV exposure.
Description
Date
2021-01-11
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Additive model,Cox model,Piece-wise exponential model,Proportional hazards,Recurrent events,Survival analysis,Time-varying effects,SDG-03 Good health and well-being
Citation
Ramjith J, Roes KCB, Zar HJ, Jonker MA. Flexible modelling of risk factors on the incidence of pneumonia in young children in South Africa using piece-wise exponential additive mixed modelling. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2021 Jan 11;21(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s12874-020-01194-6.
Embedded videos