/ps_ate

Identifying principal stratum causal effects conditional on a post-treatment intermediate response (CLeaR 2022)

Primary LanguageR

Identifying principal stratum causal effects conditional on a post-treatment intermediate response

Accepted by First Conference on Causal Learning and Reasoning (CLeaR) 2022.

@inproceedings{
  tan2022identifying,
  title={Identifying Principal Stratum Causal Effects Conditional on a Post-treatment Intermediate Response},
  author={Xiaoqing Tan and Judah Abberbock and Priya Rastogi and Gong Tang},
  booktitle={First Conference on Causal Learning and Reasoning},
  year={2022},
  url={https://openreview.net/forum?id=bmQfuKN8g19}
}

Keywords: Causal inference, Principal stratification, Identification, Randomized neoadjuvant trial, Censored outcome data.

TL;DR: We have proposed a method to identify the principal stratum causal effects conditional on a post-treatment intermediate response.

Abstract: In neoadjuvant trials on early-stage breast cancer, patients are usually randomized into a control group and a treatment group with an additional target therapy. Early efficacy of the new regimen is assessed via the binary pathological complete response (pCR) and the eventual efficacy is assessed via long-term clinical outcomes such as survival. Although pCR is strongly associated with survival, it has not been confirmed as a surrogate endpoint. To fully understand its clinical implication, it is important to establish causal estimands such as the causal effect in survival for patients who would achieve pCR under the new regimen. Under the principal stratification framework, previous studies focus on sensitivity analyses by varying model parameters in an imposed model on counterfactual outcomes. Under mild assumptions, we propose an approach to estimate those model parameters using empirical data and subsequently the causal estimand of interest. We also extend our approach to address censored outcome data. The proposed method is applied to a recent clinical trial and its performance is evaluated via simulation studies.