Overall C as a measure of discrimination in survival analysis: model specific population value and confidence interval estimation.
The assessment of the discrimination ability of a survival analysis model is a problem of considerable theoretical interest and important practical applications. This issue is, however, more complex than evaluating the performance of a linear or logistic regression. Several different measures have been proposed in the biostatistical literature. In this paper we investigate the properties of the overall C index introduced by Harrell as a natural extension of the ROC curve area to survival analysis. We develop the overall C index as a parameter describing the performance of a given model applied to the population under consideration and discuss the statistic used as its sample estimate. We discover a relationship between the overall C and the modified Kendall's tau and construct a confidence interval for our measure based on the asymptotic normality of its estimate. Then we investigate via simulations the length and coverage probability of this interval. Finally, we present a real life example evaluating the performance of a Framingham Heart Study model.
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- Survival Analysis
- Statistics & Probability
- ROC Curve
- Male
- Humans
- Heart Diseases
- Hawaii
- Confidence Intervals
- Cohort Studies
- 4905 Statistics
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Survival Analysis
- Statistics & Probability
- ROC Curve
- Male
- Humans
- Heart Diseases
- Hawaii
- Confidence Intervals
- Cohort Studies
- 4905 Statistics