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Performance of Cox proportional hazard models on recovering the ground truth of confounded exposure-response relationships for large-molecule oncology drugs.

Victor PoonDan Lu
Published in: CPT: pharmacometrics & systems pharmacology (2022)
A Cox proportional hazard (CoxPH) model is conventionally used to assess exposure-response (E-R), but its performance to uncover the ground truth when only one dose level of data is available has not been systematically evaluated. We established a simulation workflow to generate realistic E-R datasets to assess the performance of the CoxPH model in recovering the E-R ground truth in various scenarios, considering two potential reasons for the confounded E-R relationship. We found that at high doses, when the pharmacological effects are largely saturated, missing important confounders is the major reason for inferring false-positive E-R relationships. At low doses, when a positive E-R slope is the ground truth, either missing important confounders or mis-specifying the interactions can lead to inaccurate estimates of the E-R slope. This work constructed a simulation workflow generally applicable to clinical datasets to generate clinically relevant simulations and provide an in-depth interpretation on the E-R relationships with confounders inferred by the conventional CoxPH model.
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