Abstract
Tailoring treatments to individual needs is a central goal in fields such as medicine. A key step toward this goal is estimating Heterogeneous Treatment Effects (HTE)—the way treatments impact different subgroups. While crucial, HTE estimation is challenging with survival data, where time until an event (e.g., death) is key. Existing methods often assume complete observation, an assumption violated in survival data due to rightcensoring, leading to bias and inefficiency. Cui et al. (2023) proposed a doubly-robust method for HTE estimation in survival data under no hidden confounders, combining a causal survival forest with an augmented inverse-censoring weighting estimator. However, we find it struggles under heavy censoring, which is common in rareoutcome problems such as Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Moreover, most current methods cannot handle instrumental variables, which are a crucial tool in the causal inference arsenal. We introduce Multiple Imputation for Survival Treatment Response (MISTR), a novel, general, and non-parametric method for estimating HTE in survival data. MISTR uses recursively imputed survival trees to handle censoring without directly modeling the censoring mechanism. Through extensive simulations and analysis of two real-world datasets—the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol 175 and the Illinois unemployment dataset we show that MISTR outperforms prior methods under heavy censoring in the no-hidden-confounders setting, and extends to the instrumental variable setting. To our knowledge, MISTR is the first nonparametric approach for HTE estimation with unobserved confounders via instrumental variables.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 43661-43693 |
| Number of pages | 33 |
| Journal | Proceedings of Machine Learning Research |
| Volume | 267 |
| State | Published - 2025 |
| Externally published | Yes |
| Event | 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning, ICML 2025 - Vancouver, Canada Duration: 13 Jul 2025 → 19 Jul 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2025, ML Research Press. All rights reserved.