Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/9622
Title: Shared-parameter models and missingness at random
Authors: CREEMERS, An 
HENS, Niel 
AERTS, Marc 
MOLENBERGHS, Geert 
VERBEKE, Geert 
Kenward, Michael G.
Issue Date: 2008
Source: Proceedings of the 24th International Biometric Conference.
Abstract: When data are incomplete, models are often cataloged according to one of three modeling frameworks to which they belong: selection models (SeM), pattern- mixture models (PMM), and shared-parameter models (SPM). At the same time, the missing data mechanism is conveniently classified as provided by Rubin (1976): missing completely at random (MCAR), missing at random (MAR), and missing not at random (MNAR). Whereas MCR is naturally simple, in the sense that measurement and missingness processes are fully independent, and hence easy to describe in every modeling framework, this is less the case for MAR. The conventional definition (Rubin 1976) is cast in the SeM framework. Molenberghs et al.(1998) provided a characterization for PMM. In this paper, MAR is characterized for the SPM framework too, based upon a general, appealing definition of a broad class of SPM. The obtained characterization of MAR in the general SPM framework results in a complex formula. Therefor a specific sub-class of SPM models is considered, satisfying a sufficient condition for the SPM to be MAR. This sufficient condition states that the random effects driving the observed measurements and/or the missing-data-process, do not influence the missing measurements, given the observed ones. In other words, all information about the missing measurements, apart from covariates, stems from the observed measurements only. Providing some examples, it is shown that not all situations satisfying the characterization of MAR in the general shared-parameter family, are included in the considered MAR sub-family. However, these situations will necessarily be more ad hoc and less intuititive than these included in the sub-family. Further, particular implications for time-ordered longitudinal data subject to dropout are studied. It is indicated how SPM can be constrained such that dropout at a given point in time can depend on current and past, but not on future measurements, in analogy to the result by Kenward, Molenbergs and Thijs (2003) for the PMM family. While a natural requirement, it is less easily imposed in the PMM and SPM frameworks than in the SeM case. Finally, some of the models proposed are illustrated using a clinical trial in toenail dermatophyte onychomycosis.
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/9622
ISBN: 9780982191903
Category: C1
Type: Proceedings Paper
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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