Empirical-likelihood-based criteria for model selection on marginal analysis of longitudinal data with dropout missingness.
Pubmed ID: 31004449
Pubmed Central ID: PMC6889864
Journal: Biometrics
Publication Date: Sept. 1, 2019
MeSH Terms: Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Computer Simulation, Models, Statistical, Patient Dropouts, Likelihood Functions
Grants: KL2 TR000126, KL2 TR002015, UL1 TR002014
Authors: Zhang L, Chen C, Shen B, Xue Y, Wang M
Cite As: Chen C, Shen B, Zhang L, Xue Y, Wang M. Empirical-likelihood-based criteria for model selection on marginal analysis of longitudinal data with dropout missingness. Biometrics 2019 Sep;75(3):950-965. Epub 2019 Apr 25.
Studies:
Abstract
Longitudinal data are common in clinical trials and observational studies, where missing outcomes due to dropouts are always encountered. Under such context with the assumption of missing at random, the weighted generalized estimating equation (WGEE) approach is widely adopted for marginal analysis. Model selection on marginal mean regression is a crucial aspect of data analysis, and identifying an appropriate correlation structure for model fitting may also be of interest and importance. However, the existing information criteria for model selection in WGEE have limitations, such as separate criteria for the selection of marginal mean and correlation structures, unsatisfactory selection performance in small-sample setups, and so forth. In particular, there are few studies to develop joint information criteria for selection of both marginal mean and correlation structures. In this work, by embedding empirical likelihood into the WGEE framework, we propose two innovative information criteria named a joint empirical Akaike information criterion and a joint empirical Bayesian information criterion, which can simultaneously select the variables for marginal mean regression and also correlation structure. Through extensive simulation studies, these empirical-likelihood-based criteria exhibit robustness, flexibility, and outperformance compared to the other criteria including the weighted quasi-likelihood under the independence model criterion, the missing longitudinal information criterion, and the joint longitudinal information criterion. In addition, we provide a theoretical justification of our proposed criteria, and present two real data examples in practice for further illustration.