Back to Search Start Over

Multistate Models: Accurate and Dynamic Methods to Improve Predictions of Thrombotic Risk in Patients with Cancer.

Authors :
Carmona-Bayonas A
Jimenez-Fonseca P
Garrido M
Custodio A
Hernandez R
Lacalle A
Cano JM
Aguado G
Martínez de Castro E
Alvarez Manceñido F
Macias I
Visa L
Martín Richard M
Mangas M
Sánchez Cánovas M
Longo F
Iglesias Rey L
Martínez Lago N
Martín Carnicero A
Sánchez A
Azkárate A
Limón ML
Hernández Pérez C
Ramchandani A
Pimentel P
Cerdá P
Serrano R
Gil-Negrete A
Marín M
Hurtado A
Sánchez Bayona R
Gallego J
Source :
Thrombosis and haemostasis [Thromb Haemost] 2019 Nov; Vol. 119 (11), pp. 1849-1859. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Aug 28.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Research into cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) entails managing dynamic data that pose an analytical challenge. Thus, methods that assume proportional hazards to investigate prognosis entail a risk of misinterpreting or overlooking key traits or time-varying effects. We examined the AGAMENON registry, which collects data from 2,129 patients with advanced gastric cancer. An accelerated failure time (AFT) multistate model and flexible competing risks regression were used to scrutinize the time-varying effect of CAT, as well as to estimate how covariates dynamically predict cumulative incidence. The AFT model revealed that thrombosis shortened progression-free survival and overall survival with adjusted time ratios of 0.72 and 0.56, respectively. Nevertheless, its prognostic effect was nonproportional and disappeared over time if the subject managed to survive long enough. CAT that occurred later had a more pronounced prognostic effect. In the flexible competing risks model, multiple covariates were seen to have significant time-varying effects on the cumulative incidence of CAT (Khorana score, secondary thromboprophylaxis, high tumor burden, and cisplatin-containing regimen), whereas other predictors exerted a constant effect (signet ring cells and primary thromboprophylaxis). The model that assumes proportional hazards was incapable of capturing the effect of these covariates and predicted the cumulative incidence in a biased way. This study evinces that flexible and multistate models are a useful and innovative method to describe the dynamic effect of variables associated with CAT and should be more widely used.<br />Competing Interests: None declared.<br /> (Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2567-689X
Volume :
119
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Thrombosis and haemostasis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31461750
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0039-1694012