Time-dependent mediators in survival analysis: Modeling direct and indirect effects with the additive hazards model.
Odd O AalenMats J StensrudVanessa DidelezRhian DanielKjetil RøyslandSusanne StrohmaierPublished in: Biometrical journal. Biometrische Zeitschrift (2019)
We discuss causal mediation analyses for survival data and propose a new approach based on the additive hazards model. The emphasis is on a dynamic point of view, that is, understanding how the direct and indirect effects develop over time. Hence, importantly, we allow for a time varying mediator. To define direct and indirect effects in such a longitudinal survival setting we take an interventional approach (Didelez, 2018) where treatment is separated into one aspect affecting the mediator and a different aspect affecting survival. In general, this leads to a version of the nonparametric g-formula (Robins, 1986). In the present paper, we demonstrate that combining the g-formula with the additive hazards model and a sequential linear model for the mediator process results in simple and interpretable expressions for direct and indirect effects in terms of relative survival as well as cumulative hazards. Our results generalize and formalize the method of dynamic path analysis (Fosen, Ferkingstad, Borgan, & Aalen, 2006; Strohmaier et al., 2015). An application to data from a clinical trial on blood pressure medication is given.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- clinical trial
- healthcare
- study protocol
- emergency department
- electronic health record
- type diabetes
- social support
- preterm infants
- depressive symptoms
- metabolic syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- insulin resistance
- adverse drug
- data analysis
- psychometric properties
- smoking cessation
- hypertensive patients
- replacement therapy