Abstract
Motivated by a pregnancy miscarriage study, we propose a Bayesian joint model for longitudinal and time-to-event outcomes that takes into account different complexities of the problem. In particular, the longitudinal process is modeled by means of a nonlinear specification with subject-specific error variance. In addition, the exact time of fetal death is unknown, and a subgroup of women is not susceptible to miscarriage. Hence, we model the survival process via a mixture cure model for interval-censored data. Finally, both processes are linked through the subject-specific longitudinal mean and variance. A simulation study is conducted in order to validate our joint model. In the real application, we use individual weighted and Cox-Snell residuals to assess the goodness-of-fit of our proposal versus a joint model that shares only the subject-specific longitudinal mean (standard approach). In addition, the leave-one-out cross-validation criterion is applied to compare the predictive ability of both models.