The analysis of ophthalmological data pose unique challenges for the data analyst because the fundamental unit of analysis is not well defined. If the eye is used as the unit of analysis, then one must account for the correlation between fellow eyes in performing the analysis; otherwise one will underestimate p- values and widths of confidence intervals. There has been much interest in he past 15 years in the development of techniques for addressing this issue including GEE methods (Liang and Zeger, 1986) and generalized linear models (Rosner, 1984). Most of these methods are concerned with parametric statistical models such as linear or logistic regression. One gap in the literature that we intend to fill in this proposal is the incorporation of clustering effects for standard nonparametric tests. Many types of ophthalmologic data are not normally distributed (e.g. Humphrey visual field data), and require nonparametric methods for their analysis. If one wishes to use the eye as the unit of analysis, then it is important to incorporate clustering effects into these methods that take the correlation between fellow eyes into account. Many ophthalmologists prefer to use the person as the unit of analysis (e.g. using visual function in the better eye) rather than the eye. However, Olkin and Viana (1995) showed that the distribution of visual function in the better eye as a function of a person-specific covariate (e.g. age) is not normally distributed, and propose special methods for this type of analysis. We propose to extend this work to the case of eye specific covariates and the case of several covariates in the same model. Another issue is that some ophthalmic conditions (e.g. cataract) have subclassifications with possibly different etiologies (e.g. nuclear, cortical, PSC cataract). However, the important public health question is: what is the overall probability of any type of cataract as a function of risk factors (e.g., antioxidant use). We intent to generalize the standard logistic model, to be compound logistic model which accounts for the possibly differential risk factor profiles. Furthermore, there has been much work on censored survival data where the failure times occur only at specific visits. We intend to incorporate clustering effects in interval censored data. A final goal of our proposal is to perform an analysis of the natural course of retinitis pigmentosa over a 12 year period. This will allow estimation of the rates of decline of the ERG and visual field over a long period of time as well as provide estimates for an individual patient of the number of years of useful vision they can expect to have.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01EY012269-03
Application #
6179039
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZEY1-VSN (05))
Program Officer
Kurinij, Natalie
Project Start
1998-08-01
Project End
2002-07-31
Budget Start
2000-08-01
Budget End
2002-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$215,721
Indirect Cost
Name
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
071723621
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02115
Rosner, Bernard; Qiu, Weiliang; Lee, Mei-Ling T (2013) Assessing discrimination of risk prediction rules in a clustered data setting. Lifetime Data Anal 19:242-56
Glynn, Robert J; Rosner, Bernard (2012) Regression methods when the eye is the unit of analysis. Ophthalmic Epidemiol 19:159-65
Rosner, Bernard; Glynn, Robert J (2011) Power and sample size estimation for the clustered wilcoxon test. Biometrics 67:646-53
Lee, Mei-Ling Ting; Whitmore, G A; Rosner, Bernard A (2010) Threshold regression for survival data with time-varying covariates. Stat Med 29:896-905
Glynn, Robert J; Rosner, Bernard; Christen, William G (2009) Evaluation of risk factors for cataract types in a competing risks framework. Ophthalmic Epidemiol 16:98-106
Rosner, B; Glynn, R J (2009) Power and sample size estimation for the Wilcoxon rank sum test with application to comparisons of C statistics from alternative prediction models. Biometrics 65:188-97
Rosner, Bernard; Glynn, Robert J; Lee, Mei-Ling T (2007) A nonparametric test for observational non-normally distributed ophthalmic data with eye-specific exposures and outcomes. Ophthalmic Epidemiol 14:243-50
Rosner, Bernard; Glynn, Robert J; Lee, Mei-Ling T (2006) Extension of the rank sum test for clustered data: two-group comparisons with group membership defined at the subunit level. Biometrics 62:1251-9
Rosner, Bernard; Glynn, Robert J; Lee, Mei-Ling T (2006) The Wilcoxon signed rank test for paired comparisons of clustered data. Biometrics 62:185-92
Tang, Man-Lai; Tang, Nian-Sheng; Rosner, Bernard (2006) Statistical inference for correlated data in ophthalmologic studies. Stat Med 25:2771-83

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