Introduction to hrcomprisk

Ng D, Antiporta DA, Matheson M, Munoz A

hrcomprisk: Nonparametric Assessment of Differences Between Competing Risks Hazards

This package aims to estimate Nonparametric Cumulative-Incidence Based Estimation of the Ratios of Sub-Hazard Ratios to Cause-Specific Hazard Ratios.

Installation

You can install the version 0.1.0 of hrcomprisk from Github with:

Using a formatted data set to apply the hrcomprsk package

You can use the dataset provided by the authors from the CKiD study, wich has the necessary variables to run the package.

The package will create a data.frame object with the cumulative incidence of each competing risk for each exposure group. We can use the CRCumInc fuction.

Using a the output to create Plots of CIFs and the Ratio of Hazard Ratios (Rk)

We can also obtain two different plots using the plotCIF function:

  1. The Cumulative Incidence of the both events of interest overall and by exposure level, and
  2. The ratios of Hazard rations (sub-distribution Hazard Ratio and cause-specific Hazard Ratio) by event.

Bootstrapping the data to get 95% Confidence Intervals for the Ratio of Hazard Ratios (Rk)

In order to get confidence intervals to the ratio of Hazard Ratios (Rk), we can use the bootCRCumInc function:

Finally, we can use this new data to add the 95% Confidence Intervals to the previous plot using again the plotCIF function.

The wrapper function npcrest

The package also offers a wrapper function (npcrest) to do all this analyses in one step.

References

  1. Ng D, Antiporta DA, Matheson M, Munoz A. Nonparametric assessment of differences between competing risks hazard ratios: application to racial differences in pediatric chronic kidney disease progression. Clinical Epidemiology, 2020 (in press)
  2. Muñoz A, Abraham AG, Matheson M, Wada N. In: Risk Assessment and Evaluation of Predictions. Lee MLT, Gail M, Pfeiffer R, Satten G, Cai T, Gandy A, editor. New York: Springer; 2013. Non-proportionality of hazards in the competing risks framework; pp. 3–22. Google Scholar