Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/36910
Title: Pairwise joint modeling of clustered and high-dimensional outcomes with covariate missingness in pediatric pneumonia care
Authors: Gachau, Susan
NJAGI, Edmund 
MOLENBERGHS, Geert 
Owuor, Nelson
Sarguta, Rachel
English, Mike
Ayieko, Philip
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: WILEY
Source: Pharmaceutical Statistics, 21 (5), p. 845-864
Abstract: Multiple outcomes reflecting different aspects of routine care are a common phenomenon in health care research. A common approach of handling such outcomes is multiple univariate analyses, an approach which does not allow for answering research questions pertaining to joint inference. In this study, we sought to study associations among nine pediatric pneumonia care outcomes spanning assessment, diagnosis and treatment domains of care, while circumventing the computational challenge posed by their clustered and high-dimensional nature and incompletely recorded covariates. We analyzed data from a cluster randomized trial conducted in 12 Kenyan hospitals. There were varying degrees of missingness in the covariates of interest, and these were multiply imputed using latent normal joint modeling. We used the pairwise joint modeling strategy to fit a correlated random effects joint model for the nine outcomes. This entailed fitting 36 bivariate generalized linear mixed models and deriving inference for the joint model using pseudo-likelihood theory. We also analyzed the nine outcomes separately before and after multiple imputation. We observed joint effects of patient-, clinician- and hospital-level factors on pneumonia care indicators before and after multiple imputation of missing covariates. In both pairwise joint modeling and separate univariate analysis methods, enhanced audit and feedback improved documentation and adherence to recommended clinical guidelines over time in six and five pneumonia care indicators, respectively. Additionally, multiple imputation improved precision of parameter estimates compared to complete case analysis. The strength and direction of association among pneumonia outcomes varied within and across the three domains of pneumonia care
Notes: Gachau, S (corresponding author), Kenya Med Res Inst Wellcome Trust Res Programme, Hlth Serv Unit, Nairobi, Kenya.
sgachau06@gmail.com
Keywords: multiple imputation;pairwise joint modeling;pediatric care;pneumonia;pseudo-likelihood
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/36910
ISSN: 1539-1604
e-ISSN: 1539-1612
DOI: 10.1002/pst.2197
ISI #: 000760278200001
Rights: 2022 The Authors. Pharmaceutical Statistics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Validations: ecoom 2023
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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