sensitivityHHS and sensitivityGBH implement the methods described by Hudgens, Hoering and Self (2003) and Gilbert, Bosch, and Hudgens (2003), respectively. They estimate the average treatment effect in the always-selected principal stratum under assumptions 1-3, relaxing 4 using a worse-case scenario analysis (sensitivityHHS) or using a sensitivity parameter (sensitivityGBH). sensitivitySGL implements the methods described by Shepherd, Gilbert, and Lumley (2006). It is similar to sensitivityHHS and sensitivityGBH except that it computes the difference between distribution functions in the always-selected principal stratum and allows the outcome to be right-censored. sensitivityJR estimates the average treatment effect in the always-selected principal stratum relaxing assumptions 3 and 4 as described by Jemiai and Rotnitzky (2005) and Shepherd, Redman, and Ankerst (2008). sensitivitySGD incorporates the methods of Shepherd, Gilbert, and Dupont (in press), extending sensitivityJR to right-censored outcomes.
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Jemiai Y (2005), "Semiparametric Methods for Inferring Treatment Effects on Outcomes Defined Only if a Post-Randomization Event Occurs," unpublished doctoral dissertation under the supervision of A. Rotnitzky, Harvard School of Public Health, Dept. of Biostatistics. Robins JM (1986), "A new approach to causal inference in mortality studies with sustained exposure periods - Application to control of the healthy worker survivor effect," Mathemeatical Modeling 7, 1393-1512.
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Shepherd BE, Gilbert PB, Lumley T (2007), "Sensitivity analyses comparing time-to-event outcomes existing only in a subset selected postrandomization," Journal of the American Statistical Association 102, 573-582. Shepherd BE, Gilbert PB, and Dupont CT, "Sensitivity analyses comparing time-to-event outcomes only existing in a subset selected postrandomization and relaxing monotonicity," Biometrics (in press).
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