Removed support for date
objects. Use base R
Date
objects or data.table
’s
IDate
objects instead.
survival::summmary.survfit
which had improved
slightly in 3.6-4.popEpi::aggre
bugfix: aggre
now correctly
infers which stratifying variables use Lexis time scales when output is
cartesian and argument by
is of type character.survtab()
bug fix: standard errors were
mis-specified for adjusted curves, e.g. age-adjusted Ederer II
estimates. This resulted in too wide confidence intervals! SEE HERE FOR
EXAMPLE: #135.
The standard errors and confidence intervals of non-adjusted curves have
always been correct.survtab()
bug fix: confidence level was always 95 %
regardless of conf.level
#134lexpand()
bug fixed (#120): observations were dropped
if their entry by age was smaller than the smallest age value, though
entry at exit is correct and used now.sir()
rewrite (#118, #122). New more consistent output,
updates on plotting and minor News for version arguments. Introduce very
simple coef()
and confint()
methods for sir
class.sir_ag()
,
sir_lex()
and sir_exp()
for extracting SMRs
from aggre
and Lexis
objects.aggre()
; there were issues with Epi pkg dev
version which are definitely avoided (#119)rate_ratio()
,
sir_ratio()
This is a hotfix. survtab() was causing warnings in certain situations, which this update fixes. Also fixed plotting survtab objects so that multiple strata are plotted correctly when one or more curves end before the longest one as well other small fixes: See Github issues #89, #90, #91, and #92.
Direct adjusting (computing weighted averages of estimates) has been
generalized. Functions such as survtab
and
survmean
allow for using adjust()
mini
function within formulas, or a separate adjust
argument.
Weights are passed separately. See the examples in the next chapter. See
also ?direct_adjusting
.
The survtab
function computes observed, net/relative and
cause-specific survivals as well as cumulative incidence functions for
Lexis
data. Any of the supported survival time functions
can be easily adjusted by any number of categorical variables if
needed.
One can also use survtab_ag
for aggregated data. This
means the data does not have to be on the subject-level to compute
survival time function estimates.
## prep data
data(sibr)
$cancer <- "rectal"
sire$cancer <- "breast"
sibr<- rbind(sire, sibr)
sr
$cancer <- factor(sr$cancer)
sr<- sr[sr$dg_date < sr$ex_date, ]
sr
$status <- factor(sr$status, levels = 0:2,
srlabels = c("alive", "canD", "othD"))
## create Lexis object
library(Epi)
<- Lexis(entry = list(FUT = 0, AGE = dg_age, CAL = get.yrs(dg_date)),
x exit = list(CAL = get.yrs(ex_date)),
data = sr,
exit.status = status)
#> NOTE: entry.status has been set to "alive" for all.
## population hazards file - see ?pophaz for general instructions
data(popmort)
<- data.frame(popmort)
pm names(pm) <- c("sex", "CAL", "AGE", "haz")
## simple usage - uses lex.Xst as status variable
<- survtab(FUT ~ cancer, data = x,
st breaks = list(FUT = seq(0, 5, 1/12)),
surv.type = "surv.rel", pophaz = pm)
## more explicit usage
<- survtab(Surv(FUT, event = lex.Xst) ~ cancer, data = x,
st breaks = list(FUT = seq(0, 5, 1/12)),
surv.type = "surv.rel", pophaz = pm)
## adjusting
$agegr <- cut(x$dg_age, c(0,55,65,75,Inf))
x<- as.numeric(table(x$agegr))
w <- survtab(Surv(FUT, event = lex.Xst) ~ cancer + adjust(agegr),
st data = x,
breaks = list(FUT = seq(0, 5, 1/12)),
surv.type = "surv.rel",
pophaz = pm, weights = w)
The new rate
function enables easy calculation of
e.g. standardized incidence rates:
## dummy data
<- merge(0:1, 1:18)
a names(a) <- c("sex", "agegroup")
set.seed(1)
$obs <- rbinom(nrow(a), 100, 0.5)
aset.seed(1)
$pyrs <- rbinom(nrow(a), 1e4, 0.75)
a
## so called "world" standard rates (weighted to hypothetical world pop in 2000)
<- rate(data = a, obs = obs, pyrs = pyrs, print = sex,
r adjust = agegroup, weights = 'world_2000_18of5')
#> Warning in pyrJjCscXlsrH * pyrJjCscXlsrH: NAs produced by integer overflow
#> Warning in pyrJjCscXlsrH * pyrJjCscXlsrH: NAs produced by integer overflow
sex | obs | pyrs | rate.adj | SE.rate.adj | rate.adj.lo | rate.adj.hi | rate | SE.rate | rate.lo | rate.hi |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 933 | 134986 | 0.0069947 | 0.0002541 | 0.0065140 | 0.0075108 | 0.0069118 | NA | 0.0064822 | 0.0073699 |
1 | 875 | 134849 | 0.0064453 | 0.0002429 | 0.0059865 | 0.0069394 | 0.0064887 | NA | 0.0060727 | 0.0069332 |