PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

lillies: An R package for the estimation of excess Life Years Lost among patients with a given disease or condition.

  • Oleguer Plana-Ripoll,
  • Vladimir Canudas-Romo,
  • Nanna Weye,
  • Thomas M Laursen,
  • John J McGrath,
  • Per Kragh Andersen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228073
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
p. e0228073

Abstract

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Life expectancy at a given age is a summary measure of mortality rates present in a population (estimated as the area under the survival curve), and represents the average number of years an individual at that age is expected to live if current age-specific mortality rates apply now and in the future. A complementary metric is the number of Life Years Lost, which is used to measure the reduction in life expectancy for a specific group of persons, for example those diagnosed with a specific disease or condition (e.g. smoking). However, calculation of life expectancy among those with a specific disease is not straightforward for diseases that are not present at birth, and previous studies have considered a fixed age at onset of the disease, e.g. at age 15 or 20 years. In this paper, we present the R package lillies (freely available through the Comprehensive R Archive Network; CRAN) to guide the reader on how to implement a recently-introduced method to estimate excess Life Years Lost associated with a disease or condition that overcomes these limitations. In addition, we show how to decompose the total number of Life Years Lost into specific causes of death through a competing risks model, and how to calculate confidence intervals for the estimates using non-parametric bootstrap. We provide a description on how to use the method when the researcher has access to individual-level data (e.g. electronic healthcare and mortality records) and when only aggregated-level data are available.