6: Study Design I Flashcards
What are the levels of evidence-based studies from least to most reliable?
Least:
Editorials, expert opinion
Case series, case reports
Case-control studies
Cohort studies
Randomized controlled trials
Systematic Reviews
Most
What must be defined for any study design?
- Defined population (P) for grouping
- Outcomes (O)
- Interventions (I) or exposures (E)
What is a bias?
An error introduced into sampling or testing by selecting or favouring one outcome/ answer over others
Wheat are the types of bias?
Information bias:
Observational, recall, classification
Selection bias:
Identification, admission rate, non-response
Describe cohort studies
2 groups: group of interest and comparison group
Follow both groups over time
Compare outcomes: incidence rates, rate ratio
Describe case-control study
2 groups: group of interest and comparison group
Take the histories and compare to draw conclusions
Describe cross-sectional studies
Take a study population into 2 groups: controls and cases
Split 2 groups into those exposed and those not exposed
Compare.
Study occurs at a single point in time
Describe a clinical (randomized controlled) trial
Randomly assign patients into treatment and control groups
Follow up and compare results (outcome, survival, recurrence)
What are the 2 types and subtypes of basic study designs
Descriptive: survey (cross-sectional), qualitative
Analytic: experimental and observational analytic
Describe the case-control study methods from the British medical journal in 1950 describing smoking and carcinoma of the lung
- 20 London hospitals with people admitted with clinical diagnosis of lung cancer
- control from simultaneous inpatients same sex and five year age band
- meticulous control for other variables/ confounding factors
What are the + and - of case-control studies?
+ quick and cheap
+ good for rare diseases & disorders with delay between exposure & outcome
+ assess multiple exposures
- only one outcome
- prone to recall and selection bias
- no incidence/prevalnce data
- analyse with odds ratio
- not good for rare exposures
What is an example of a famous cohort study and what did it study?
Mortality in relation to smoking: 50 years’ observations on male British doctors
- questionnaire for smoking habit, 2/3s response rate (high)
- follow up BMJ/NHS
- cause of death from death certificate (lung cancer, COPD, etc)
How do you analyse cohort studies?
- disease incidence (new cases/person time)
- incidence ratio (incidence in exposed / incidence in unexposed)
Rate ratio, hazard ratio
What were the rate atio results from the 1950s biritish doctors study?
Mortality (/1000pyrs):
Never smoke- 0.17
Former smoker- 0.68
Current smoker- 2.49
RR compared to never smoker:
Former smoker- 4.0
Current smoker- 14.6
Describe the nurses health cohort study
- 1976, 120,000 nurses aged 30-55 across US
- exploring cancer & cardiovascular disease
- focus on women’s health and diet