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Another way to account for possibly non-proportional hazards is to represent the variation of the covariate effect with time by a time-by-covariate interaction. As suggested by Cox in his original paper, the disease-related mortality hazard function can be expressed as given here where f(t) is a pre-specified function of time, z2 is the covariate involved in this interaction and g 2 is the regression coefficient for this interaction. If g 2 is set to 0, the model reduces to the conventional relative survival model. We consider here only two classic functions of time, linear or logarithmic. It should be noted that they both impose the monotonicity constraint.