How to calculate the area under a Weibull curve

Talitha

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Sep 24, 2018
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4
Hi all,

I'm practising my survival analysis skills and I'm trying to conduct a partitioned survival model by means of a Weibull distribution. I can easily manage to do so for exponential distributions, where the survival function is denoted as s(t)=EXP(-(EXP(-intercept)*t)). The area under the curve is then A(t)=(1-s(t))/EXP(-intercept). The intercept is derived from an analysis in R.

The survival curve for a Weibull distribution is S(t)=EXP(-EXP(-(intercept/EXP(log-scale)))*t^(1/EXP(log-scale))).
The intercept and log-scale are again derived from R. I do not have a formula to calculate an area under this survival curve, nor can I find one. Could anyone help me with this?

Thanks!
 

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I retract that; the survival function is the complement of the CDF, not the PDF.

What's the useful interpretation of its integral?
 
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Cross posted https://www.excelforum.com/excel-fo...calculate-the-area-under-a-weibull-curve.html

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The interpretation is usually used in partitioned survival analysis.
I am using it to grasp the probably costs in certain health states -> I calculate the surface under so called overall survival (OS) curves and progression free survival (PFS) curves. They are mutually exclusive curves/health states. Say, the surface under the overall survival curve at t=5 equals 4.5 and the surface under the progression free curve at t=5 equals 2.5. In the progression free disease state the costs per cycle (t=1) equal 1000 dollars and in the progressed disease state equal 2000 dollars. You then now that for an average patient you might expect (4.5-2.5)*2000+2.5*1000=6000 for costs.
 
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*probable, * know hahah

I figured now that the only info I am missing to use the excel function [FONT=&quot]WEIBULL.DIST(x,alpha,beta,cumulative) is beta.
Any idea how I can derive beta? [/FONT]
 
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