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The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study
The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study
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The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study
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The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study
The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study

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The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study
The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study
Journal Article

The impact of different censoring methods for analyzing survival using real-world data with linked mortality information: a simulation study

2024
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Overview
Background Evaluating outcome reliability is critical in real-world evidence studies. Overall survival is a common outcome in these studies; however, its capture in real-world data (RWD) sources is often incomplete and supplemented with linked mortality information from external sources. Conflicting recommendations exist for censoring overall survival in real-world evidence studies. This simulation study aimed to understand the impact of different censoring methods on estimating median survival and log hazard ratios when external mortality information is partially captured. Methods We used Monte Carlo simulation to emulate a non-randomized comparative effectiveness study of two treatments with RWD from electronic health records and linked external mortality data. We simulated the time to death, the time to last database activity, and the time to data cutoff. Death events after the last database activity were attributed to linked external mortality data and randomly set to missing to reflect the sensitivity of contemporary real-world data sources. Two censoring schemes were evaluated: (1) censoring at the last activity date and (2) censoring at the end of data availability (data cutoff) without an observed death. We assessed the performance of each method in estimating median survival and log hazard ratios using bias, coverage, variance, and rejection rate under varying amounts of incomplete mortality information and varying treatment effects, length of follow-up, and sample size. Results When mortality information was fully captured, median survival estimates were unbiased when censoring at data cutoff and underestimated when censoring at the last activity. When linked mortality information was missing, censoring at the last activity date underestimated the median survival, while censoring at the data cutoff overestimated it. As missing linked mortality information increased, bias decreased when censoring at the last activity date and increased when censoring at data cutoff. Conclusions Researchers should consider the completeness of linked external mortality information when choosing how to censor the analysis of overall survival using RWD. Substantial bias in median survival estimates can occur if an inappropriate censoring scheme is selected. We advocate for RWD providers to perform validation studies of their mortality data and publish their findings to inform methodological decisions better.