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Applied Survival Analysis: Regression Modeling of Time-to-Event Data 2nd Edition
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Since publication of the first edition nearly a decade ago, analyses using time-to-event methods have increase considerably in all areas of scientific inquiry mainly as a result of model-building methods available in modern statistical software packages. However, there has been minimal coverage in the available literature to9 guide researchers, practitioners, and students who wish to apply these methods to health-related areas of study. Applied Survival Analysis, Second Edition provides a comprehensive and up-to-date introduction to regression modeling for time-to-event data in medical, epidemiological, biostatistical, and other health-related research.
This book places a unique emphasis on the practical and contemporary applications of regression modeling rather than the mathematical theory. It offers a clear and accessible presentation of modern modeling techniques supplemented with real-world examples and case studies. Key topics covered include: variable selection, identification of the scale of continuous covariates, the role of interactions in the model, assessment of fit and model assumptions, regression diagnostics, recurrent event models, frailty models, additive models, competing risk models, and missing data.
Features of the Second Edition include:
- Expanded coverage of interactions and the covariate-adjusted survival functions
- The use of the Worchester Heart Attack Study as the main modeling data set for illustrating discussed concepts and techniques
- New discussion of variable selection with multivariable fractional polynomials
- Further exploration of time-varying covariates, complex with examples
- Additional treatment of the exponential, Weibull, and log-logistic parametric regression models
- Increased emphasis on interpreting and using results as well as utilizing multiple imputation methods to analyze data with missing values
- New examples and exercises at the end of each chapter
Analyses throughout the text are performed using Stata® Version 9, and an accompanying FTP site contains the data sets used in the book. Applied Survival Analysis, Second Edition is an ideal book for graduate-level courses in biostatistics, statistics, and epidemiologic methods. It also serves as a valuable reference for practitioners and researchers in any health-related field or for professionals in insurance and government.
- ISBN-100471754994
- ISBN-13978-0471754992
- Edition2nd
- PublisherWiley-Interscience
- Publication dateMarch 7, 2008
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions6.1 x 1.1 x 9.3 inches
- Print length416 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“This is a great book for anyone analyzing time-to-event data. Researchers interested in the underlying theory will have to go elsewhere..” (Stat Papers, 1 December 2012)
"It is well suited for teaching a graduate-level course in medical statistics, and the data sets used in the book are available online." (Biometrical Journal, August 2009)"This is a superb resource - a practical guide with up-to-date applications. The authors are excellent teachers of the mathematics and application of survival data regression modeling." (Doodys, August 2009)
"The extensive and detailed coverage of the process of survival model fitting, as well as the applied exercises, make this textbook an excellent choice for an applied survival analysis course." (Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics, Volume 18, Issue 6, 2008)
From the Inside Flap
Since publication of the first edition nearly a decade ago, analyses using time-to-event methods have increase considerably in all areas of scientific inquiry mainly as a result of model-building methods available in modern statistical software packages. However, there has been minimal coverage in the available literature to9 guide researchers, practitioners, and students who wish to apply these methods to health-related areas of study. Applied Survival Analysis, Second Edition provides a comprehensive and up-to-date introduction to regression modeling for time-to-event data in medical, epidemiological, biostatistical, and other health-related research.
This book places a unique emphasis on the practical and contemporary applications of regression modeling rather than the mathematical theory. It offers a clear and accessible presentation of modern modeling techniques supplemented with real-world examples and case studies. Key topics covered include: variable selection, identification of the scale of continuous covariates, the role of interactions in the model, assessment of fit and model assumptions, regression diagnostics, recurrent event models, frailty models, additive models, competing risk models, and missing data.
Features of the Second Edition include:
- Expanded coverage of interactions and the covariate-adjusted survival functions
- The use of the Worchester Heart Attack Study as the main modeling data set for illustrating discussed concepts and techniques
- New discussion of variable selection with multivariable fractional polynomials
- Further exploration of time-varying covariates, complex with examples
- Additional treatment of the exponential, Weibull, and log-logistic parametric regression models
- Increased emphasis on interpreting and using results as well as utilizing multiple imputation methods to analyze data with missing values
- New examples and exercises at the end of each chapter
Analyses throughout the text are performed using Stata® Version 9, and an accompanying FTP site contains the data sets used in the book. Applied Survival Analysis, Second Edition is an ideal book for graduate-level courses in biostatistics, statistics, and epidemiologic methods. It also serves as a valuable reference for practitioners and researchers in any health-related field or for professionals in insurance and government.
From the Back Cover
Since publication of the first edition nearly a decade ago, analyses using time-to-event methods have increase considerably in all areas of scientific inquiry mainly as a result of model-building methods available in modern statistical software packages. However, there has been minimal coverage in the available literature to9 guide researchers, practitioners, and students who wish to apply these methods to health-related areas of study. Applied Survival Analysis, Second Edition provides a comprehensive and up-to-date introduction to regression modeling for time-to-event data in medical, epidemiological, biostatistical, and other health-related research.
This book places a unique emphasis on the practical and contemporary applications of regression modeling rather than the mathematical theory. It offers a clear and accessible presentation of modern modeling techniques supplemented with real-world examples and case studies. Key topics covered include: variable selection, identification of the scale of continuous covariates, the role of interactions in the model, assessment of fit and model assumptions, regression diagnostics, recurrent event models, frailty models, additive models, competing risk models, and missing data.
Features of the Second Edition include:
- Expanded coverage of interactions and the covariate-adjusted survival functions
- The use of the Worchester Heart Attack Study as the main modeling data set for illustrating discussed concepts and techniques
- New discussion of variable selection with multivariable fractional polynomials
- Further exploration of time-varying covariates, complex with examples
- Additional treatment of the exponential, Weibull, and log-logistic parametric regression models
- Increased emphasis on interpreting and using results as well as utilizing multiple imputation methods to analyze data with missing values
- New examples and exercises at the end of each chapter
Analyses throughout the text are performed using Stata® Version 9, and an accompanying FTP site contains the data sets used in the book. Applied Survival Analysis, Second Edition is an ideal book for graduate-level courses in biostatistics, statistics, and epidemiologic methods. It also serves as a valuable reference for practitioners and researchers in any health-related field or for professionals in insurance and government.
About the Author
Stanley Lemeshow, PhD, is Professor and Dean of the College of Public Health at The Ohio State University. Dr. Lemeshow has over thirty-five years of academic experience in the areas of regression, categorical data methods, and sampling methods. He is the coauthor of Sampling of Population: Methods and Application and Applied Logistic Regression, both published by Wiley.
Susanne May, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Biostatistics at the University of California, San Diego. Dr. May has over twelve years of experience in providing statistical support for health-related research projects.
Product details
- Publisher : Wiley-Interscience; 2nd edition (March 7, 2008)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0471754994
- ISBN-13 : 978-0471754992
- Item Weight : 1.63 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.1 x 1.1 x 9.3 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,005,955 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #126 in Biostatistics (Books)
- #326 in Medical Research (Books)
- #1,330 in Probability & Statistics (Books)
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Customers find this book a useful resource for survival analysis and failure data. It provides clear descriptions and examples, with references to highly technical texts and journal articles. The concepts are easily understood, and descriptions of application to real studies are welcome. Readers appreciate the helpful website that includes all the content.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book a good introduction to survival analysis and a resource for analyzing failure data. They say it provides a good introduction to SAS procedure LIFEREG.
"This book is essential for anyone who is doing survival analysis...." Read more
"...It is a good resource when analyzing failure data." Read more
"...The chapter also includes introductory material on the general survival model, including a nice description of the log likelihood function...." Read more
"Very good textbook for survival analysis." Read more
Customers find the book useful and easy to understand. They appreciate the clear descriptions and examples, as well as references to highly technical texts and journal articles. The concepts are explained clearly, and descriptions of application to real studies are helpful. The book provides introductory sections on more advanced concepts like the extended Cox model.
"...For non-R users such as myself, there is an incredibly helpful website: [...]that includes all of the examples in the book demonstrated in Stata, SAS..." Read more
"...It was a good read and its principles can be applied to many different areas. It is a good resource when analyzing failure data." Read more
"...This is a great chapter for anyone who has ever been thrown a ton of data (with a bushel of possible covariates) and asked to "fit a model to this..." Read more
"Easy to read and very useful!" Read more
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 28, 2016This book is essential for anyone who is doing survival analysis. It it clearly written and useful, and covers a wide range of topics related to survival analysis.
For non-R users such as myself, there is an incredibly helpful website: [...]that includes all of the examples in the book demonstrated in Stata, SAS, and SPSS. For me, this practical application using statistical packages I was comfortable with, combined with the useful discription in the book facilitated both my understanding of the concepts, and allowed me to hit the ground running in my analytic work.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2011Would definitely buy this again. It was a good read and its principles can be applied to many different areas. It is a good resource when analyzing failure data.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2005The authors provide a really nice, non-technical survey of the landscape for Cox Proportional Hazards models. A nice aspect of their treatment is the care they take to reference all highly technical texts and journal articles. For example, if you'd like to find out more about goodness-of-fit tests for survival models, the authors provide ample references to the Counting Process Theory of Martingale Residuals.
The first chapter discusses the basic characteristics of survival data, including the notion of censoring (in all of its various forms). Examples of the principle types of censoring are included. The chapter also includes introductory material on the general survival model, including a nice description of the log likelihood function. Curiously, the rigorous definition of the hazard function has been omitted, probably to avoid intimidating readers who are not familiar with formal limits.
Chapter 2 continues to build up the general survival model and introduces the relationship between the survivor function and the cumulative hazard. Pointwise estimators for the survivor function are discussed, including the Kaplan-Meier estimator along with the various variance estimators. Test statistics for comparing two survival populations are introduced, including the Log-Rank and General Wilcoxon statistics. The reader is encouraged to read the counting process treatments of these statistics to see why they produced defensible hypothesis tests.
Chapter 3 is devoted to the Cox Model and Cox's partial likelihood function. Tests for significance of the coefficients are introduced, included the Wald test, log likelihood ratio test and the score test. These are used heavily in the later chapters as the basis of a model-building methodology.
Chapter 4 is a very short, but nicely written chapter explaining how to interpret the values of each regression coefficent. It also describes covariate-adjustment techniques for model diagnostics.
Chapter 5 is just a wonderful chapter which outlines classical model building techniques. This is a great chapter for anyone who has ever been thrown a ton of data (with a bushel of possible covariates) and asked to "fit a model to this stuff".
Readers who have done a lot of purposeful fitting of linear regression models won't find the basic techniques new, but use of survival specific residuals and selection criterion will probably be an eye-opener. The section on assessing the functional form for continuous covariates is also nicely written.
However, the section on Best Subsets Selection was a little too "cook-booky" for my taste.
Chapter 6 is another very nice chapter on goodness-of-fit. It discusses analysis of the various residuals and their use for analysis outliers, testing proportional hazards assumptions and overall Goodness-of-Fit.
Chapter 7 discusses the standard extensions of the Cox model, including stratification and time-varying covariates. Chapter 8 discusses parametric survival models, and is a good introduction to the SAS procedure LIFEREG. The generalization of the Cox model to recurring event data (also know as Aalen's multiplicative intensity model) can be found in Chapter 9.
My only complaint is that each chapter was designed to be read in one sitting. Individual ideas, topics and formulas can be buried in a seemingly unbroken chain of paragraphs. The lack of sub-sub section titles,etc, makes using the text as is somewhat cumbersome to use as a desk reference. I've gotten around this limitation by marking key concepts, etc., in the margin in order to give a "quick search" capability enhancement to the index.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2012This book was purchased out of PURE necessity where I was acting a the sole biostatistician very early in my career... it truly was a survival analysis. The HL series for both Survival and Logistic give great examples that anyone with a basic background in statistics can understand. Keep in mind that this is more theoretical and that if you are just getting started with Survival or Logistic models you are better off with the Paul Allison series.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2014Very good textbook for survival analysis.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2017Easy to read and very useful!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2020Book is unusable - pagination is so arbitrary and page layout so awful.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2015I used this book to teach a course at UC Berkeley Extensions and I think its great. It provides a clear non-technical introduction to Surival Analysis. I used this book, plus the UCLA statitic site to generate power points and SAS code to provide presentations and the code to generate the tables and figures in the text. I do think the second edition shows a lot of improvement. They have a sample section in Chapter 9.7 and they have a section on fractional poloynomials which has been much improved. I highly recomment it.
Top reviews from other countries
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Daniela MannariniReviewed in Italy on July 7, 20135.0 out of 5 stars Ottimo
La modalità dell'ordine e della spedizione è stata ineccepibile: il libro è arrivato persino un giorno prima di quanto promesso!
StatisticianReviewed in Canada on November 1, 20154.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Good for self - taught ones.

