2.4.5. Basic Biostats I Flashcards

1
Q

Experimental vs. Observational Study

A

Experimental means that the investigators assigned exposure, while observational means that they did not

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2
Q

Types of experimental studies

A

Randomized clinical trial (preferred) and non-randomized clinical trial

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3
Q

Types of Analytical Studies

A

Cohort (exposure → outcome)

Case-Control (outcome → exposure)

Cross-Sectional (exposure & outcome at the same time)

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4
Q

Types of Descriptive Studies

A

NO Comparison Group

Ecologic Study
Case Reports
Case Series

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5
Q

Selection of Control Group

A

Controls represent population at risk from which the case arose

Restrictions:

  1. Free of disease of interest at time
  2. Must have had opportunity for both exposure & disease
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6
Q

Odds Ratio

A

Odds a case was exposed = A/C

Odds a control was exposed = B/D

Odds ratio = A/C / B/D = AD/BC

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7
Q

Interpreting Odds Ratios

A

OR ranges from 0 to infinity

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8
Q

if OR is < 1

A

decreased risk

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9
Q

if OR = 1

A

equal risk

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10
Q

if OR > 1

A

increased risk

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11
Q

If outcome is rare

A

OR ~ RR

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12
Q

Confounding Requirements

A
  1. A risk factor for the outcome
  2. Associated with the exposure
  3. Not caused by the exposure

Confounding factors distort or mask the true effect of exposure in an epidemiologic study

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13
Q

How to address confounding?

A
  1. Matching
  2. Stratification
  3. Adjustment
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14
Q

Features of Cohort Study

A
  1. Start with exposure
  2. Look forward in time from the point of exposure to determine outcomes of interest
  3. Compare incidence of outcome between exposed and unexposed groups
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15
Q

Bias in cohort study

A

Selection: exposed and unexposed subjects are not equally susceptible; subjects may move from one exposure group to another during follow up; subjects in one group may be more likely to drop out

Measurement: subjects in one group are more likely to have outcome detected

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16
Q

What is cohort useful for?

A

Rare exposures

17
Q

What does cohort measure?

A

Incidence and relative risk

18
Q

What is case-control good for?

A

Rare diseases

19
Q

What does case-control measure?

A

Odds ratio

20
Q

Advantages of Cohort

A
  1. Approximates RCT design
  2. Can evaluate multiple outcomes
  3. Provides an actual measure of risk of the outcome of interest
  4. Can extract incidence and relative risk
21
Q

Disadvantages of Cohort

A
  1. Potential for loss to follow-up
  2. Requires large number of subjects
  3. Not intended for the study of rare outcomes
  4. Takes a long time
  5. Expensive
22
Q

Advantages of CC

A
  1. Study of rare diseases
  2. Study of disease with long latency
  3. Requires relatively few subjects
  4. Requires less time than Cohort
  5. Allows for evaluation of multiple exposures
  6. Well-suited for outbreak investigation
23
Q

Disadvantages of CC

A
  1. Relies on recall of subjects
  2. Problems of recall bias
  3. Selection of appropriate control group may be difficult
  4. Yields the odds ratio which is only an estimate of relative risk
  5. Cannot calculate incidence rates