Abstract

Conventional hazard regression analyses frequently assume constant regression coefficients and scalar covariates. However, some covariate effects may vary with time. Moreover, medical imaging has become an increasingly important tool in screening, diagnosis, and prognosis of various diseases, given its information visualization and quantitative assessment. This study considers an additive hazards model with time-varying coefficients and imaging predictors to examine the dynamic effects of potential scalar and imaging risk factors for the failure of interest. We develop a two-stage approach that comprises the high-dimensional functional principal component analysis technique in the first stage and the counting process-based estimating equation approach in the second stage. In addition, we construct the pointwise confidence intervals for the proposed estimators and provide a significance test for the effects of scalar and imaging covariates. Simulation studies demonstrate the satisfactory performance of the proposed method. An application to the Alzheimer's disease neuroimaging initiative study further illustrates the utility of the methodology.

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