A sensitivity analysis approach for the causal hazard ratio in randomized and observational studies

Rachel Axelrod*, Daniel Nevo

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The hazard ratio (HR) is often reported as the main causal effect when studying survival data. Despite its popularity, the HR suffers from an unclear causal interpretation. As already pointed out in the literature, there is a built-in selection bias in the HR, because similarly to the truncation by death problem, the HR conditions on post-treatment survival. A recently proposed alternative, inspired by the Survivor Average Causal Effect, is the causal HR, defined as the ratio between hazards across treatment groups among the study participants that would have survived regardless of their treatment assignment. We discuss the challenge in identifying the causal HR and present a sensitivity analysis identification approach in randomized controlled trials utilizing a working frailty model. We further extend our framework to adjust for potential confounders using inverse probability of treatment weighting. We present a Cox-based and a flexible non-parametric kernel-based estimation under right censoring. We study the finite-sample properties of the proposed estimation methods through simulations. We illustrate the utility of our framework using two real-data examples.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2743-2756
Number of pages14
JournalBiometrics
Volume79
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2023

Funding

FundersFunder number
Israel Science Foundation827/21

    Keywords

    • causal inference
    • frailty models
    • survival analysis

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