Literature DB >> 10191964

Actual versus actuarial analysis for cardiac valve complications: the problem of competing risks.

C C Miller1, H J Safi, A Winnerkvist, J C Baldwin.   

Abstract

Methods for analyzing rates of events such as heart valve failure following surgery are important for comparing different techniques and devices; however, in patients undergoing major surgery, other risks such as mortality compete with the risk of heart valve failure to determine each patient's final outcome. When multiple, mutually exclusive endpoints are possible, a situation known to statisticians as a competing risks problem arises. No single statistical technique that is currently available provides an entirely satisfactory solution to this problem. We argue that in order for valve failure incidences to be useful clinically, the overall patient outcome milieu from which these failures arise must be considered. In this article, we review recent work in the area of competing-risks analysis as it pertains to heart valve surgery outcome.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10191964     DOI: 10.1097/00001573-199903000-00001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Opin Cardiol        ISSN: 0268-4705            Impact factor:   2.161


  2 in total

1.  Lowering midlife levels of systolic blood pressure as a public health strategy to reduce late-life dementia: perspective from the Honolulu Heart Program/Honolulu Asia Aging Study.

Authors:  Lenore J Launer; Timothy Hughes; Binbing Yu; Kamal Masaki; Helen Petrovitch; G Webster Ross; Lon R White
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2010-04-19       Impact factor: 10.190

Review 2.  Cardiac surgical patients are not the same. But who knows that: the patient, the cardiologist or the surgeon?

Authors:  Haralabos Parissis; Bassel Al-Alao
Journal:  Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2013-10-29
  2 in total

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