Randomized interventional effects in semicompeting risks, with application to a hematopoietic cell transplantation study
Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 07:59 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The randomized interventional approach identifies direct and indirect effects on terminal events in semicompeting risks data with right censoring.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We extend the randomized interventional approach to time-to-event outcomes, where both intermediate and terminal events are subject to right censoring. We present the identification formula for interventional effects.
What carries the argument
A random draw for the intermediate event process from a reference distribution, either marginally over time-varying confounders or conditionally given the observed history, that identifies the interventional effects.
Load-bearing premise
The random draw for the intermediate event process from a reference distribution identifies the interventional effects under the assumptions for the semicompeting risks setting with censoring.
What would settle it
If the identification formula does not recover the known effects in a simulation study where the data generating process matches the assumptions, the approach would be falsified.
Figures
read the original abstract
In clinical studies, the risk of the primary (terminal) event may be modified by intermediate events, resulting in semicompeting risks. To study the treatment effect on the terminal event mediated by the intermediate event, researchers wish to decompose the total effect into direct and indirect effects. In this article, we extend the randomized interventional approach to time-to-event outcomes, where both intermediate and terminal events are subject to right censoring. We envision a random draw for the intermediate event process from a reference distribution, either marginally over time-varying confounders or conditionally given the observed history. We present the identification formula for interventional effects. We also discuss some variants of the identification assumptions. We estimate the treatment effects using nonparametric maximum likelihood estimation and propose a sensitivity analysis that incorporates a latent frailty. As an illustration, we study the effect of matched unrelated donor versus haploidentical donor on death mediated by relapse in a hematopoietic cell transplantation study with graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) as the time-varying confounder. We find that matched unrelated donor transplantation is preferable in terms of survival rates under the use of post-transplant PTCy GVHD prophylaxis for lymphoma patients.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper extends randomized interventional effects to semicompeting risks settings with right censoring on both the intermediate event (e.g., relapse) and terminal event (e.g., death). It defines interventional effects via a random draw of the intermediate event process from a reference distribution (marginal over time-varying confounders or conditional on observed history), presents an identification formula under stated assumptions (with variants discussed), estimates effects via nonparametric maximum likelihood, proposes a frailty-based sensitivity analysis for unmeasured confounding, and applies the method to compare matched unrelated donor vs. haploidentical donor transplantation on death mediated by relapse (with GVHD as time-varying confounder) in a hematopoietic cell transplantation study, concluding that matched unrelated donor is preferable under post-transplant PTCy GVHD prophylaxis for lymphoma patients.
Significance. If the identification and estimation hold, the work offers a useful extension of interventional effect decompositions to censored time-to-event data with semicompeting risks, enabling direct/indirect effect analysis in clinical settings like transplantation studies. The frailty sensitivity analysis strengthens robustness claims, and the real-data application provides concrete findings on donor choice. Strengths include targeting external identification assumptions rather than circular reductions and addressing censoring explicitly.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract states that an identification formula is presented but provides no explicit expression or key assumptions; adding a compact version of the formula (or reference to its equation number) would improve accessibility without lengthening the abstract unduly.
- [Identification and assumptions section] The description of the random draw for the intermediate process (marginal vs. conditional) is central; ensure the main text explicitly contrasts how each variant handles time-varying confounders and right censoring on both events.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive summary of our work and for recommending minor revision. The referee's description accurately reflects the manuscript's contributions to extending randomized interventional effects to right-censored semicompeting risks data, including identification, nonparametric estimation, frailty-based sensitivity analysis, and the hematopoietic cell transplantation application. No major comments were enumerated in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation self-contained
full rationale
The paper extends an existing randomized interventional framework to semicompeting risks with right censoring on both events by stating an identification formula that draws the intermediate process from a reference distribution (marginal or conditional). Estimation proceeds via nonparametric maximum likelihood, with a separate frailty-based sensitivity analysis. No equation reduces a claimed prediction to a fitted input by construction, no load-bearing step collapses to a self-citation, and the central identification rests on externally stated assumptions rather than internal redefinition. The provided abstract and reader's assessment confirm the absence of the enumerated circularity patterns.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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