308 PART 6 Analyzing Survival Data
Next, count how many participants experienced the event during each slice, and
how many were censored, meaning they were last observed during this time slice
and had not experienced the event. From Figure 21-2, you see that»
» During the first year after surgery, one participant died (#1), and one partici-
pant was censored (#5, who was LFU).»
» During the second year, no participants died or were censored.»
» During the third year, two participants died (#4 and #9), and none were
censored.
Continue tabulating deaths and censored times for the fourth through seventh
years, and enter these counts into the appropriate cells of a spreadsheet like the
one shown in Figure 21-3.
To fill in the table shown in Figure 21-3:»
» Put the description of the time interval that defines each slice into Column A.»
» Enter the total number of participants alive at the start into Column B in the
0–1 yr row.»
» Enter the counts of participants who died within each time slice into Column C
(labeled Died).»
» Enter the counts of participants who were censored during each time slice
into Column D (labeled Last Seen Alive).
After you’ve entered all the counts, the spreadsheet will look like Figure 21-3.
Then you perform the calculations shown in the Formula row at the top of the
figure to generate the numbers in all the other cells of the table. (To see what it
looks like when the table is completely filled in, take a sneak peek at
Figure 21-4.)
FIGURE 21-3:
A partially
completed life
table to analyze
the survival times
shown in
Figure 21-2.
© John Wiley & Sons, Inc.