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Modelo de Fragilidade Compartilhada para Dados de Sobrevivência Agrupados×Estimador de Sobrevivência de Kaplan-Meier×Modelo de Sobrevivência para Eventos Recorrentes×
ÁreaAnálise de sobrevivênciaAnálise de sobrevivênciaAnálise de sobrevivência
FamíliaSurvival analysisSurvival analysisSurvival analysis
Ano de origem197919581981
Autor originalVaupel, J.W., Manton, K.G. & Stallard, E.Kaplan, E. L. & Meier, P.Andersen & Gill (AG, 1982); Prentice, Williams & Peterson (PWP, 1981); Wei, Lin & Weissfeld (WLW, 1989)
TipoRandom effects survival modelNon-parametric survival estimatorSemi-parametric hazard model for repeated events
Fonte seminalVaupel, J.W., Manton, K.G. & Stallard, E. (1979). The Impact of Heterogeneity in Individual Frailty on the Dynamics of Mortality. Demography, 16(3), 439–454. DOI ↗Kaplan, E. L. & Meier, P. (1958). Nonparametric Estimation from Incomplete Observations. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 53(282), 457–481. DOI ↗Cook, R.J. & Lawless, J.F. (2007). The Statistical Analysis of Recurrent Events. Springer. DOI ↗
Outros nomesshared frailty model, random effects survival model, Frailty Modeli (Paylaşılan Kırılganlık)product-limit estimator, km curve, kaplan-meier sağkalım analiziTekrarlayan Olay Modeli (Recurrent Events), Andersen-Gill model, AG model, Wei-Lin-Weissfeld model
Relacionados324
ResumoThe shared frailty model, introduced by Vaupel, Manton, and Stallard in 1979, extends standard survival regression by incorporating a random effect — the 'frailty' — that captures unobserved heterogeneity among subjects or clusters. When survival outcomes are measured on individuals who share a common environment (patients in the same hospital, members of the same family, animals in the same litter), a frailty term accounts for the within-cluster dependence that ordinary Cox regression ignores.The Kaplan-Meier estimator, introduced by Kaplan and Meier in 1958, is a non-parametric method that estimates the survival curve — the probability of remaining event-free over time — from right-censored time-to-event data. The log-rank test is the companion procedure used to compare survival curves between groups.A recurrent event model is a survival analysis extension, formalised through the landmark contributions of Prentice, Williams and Peterson (1981), Andersen and Gill (1982), and Wei, Lin and Weissfeld (1989), that models time-to-event data when the same event — such as a hospital readmission, disease relapse, or equipment failure — can occur multiple times in the same individual. The three principal frameworks are the Andersen-Gill (AG) model, the Prentice-Williams-Peterson (PWP) stratified model, and the Wei-Lin-Weissfeld (WLW) marginal model, each making different assumptions about within-subject dependence.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Frailty Model · Kaplan-Meier · Recurrent Event Model. Recuperado em 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare