Case-Control Studies Flashcards

1
Q

What are Case-Control Studies?

A
  • Observational studies that allow the researcher to be a passive observer in individuals with disease/condition of interest (cases) who are compared with people who do not have the condition of interest (controls)
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2
Q

What are the group assignments based on?

A
  • Disease Status
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3
Q

When are case-control studies useful?

A

When studying a rare disease or investigating an outbreak

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4
Q

What are the reasons to select a case-control design?

A
  • Unable to force group allocation
  • Limited resources (time, money, subjects)
  • The disease of interest is rare in occurrence and little is known about its associations/causes
  • Prospective exposure data is difficult/expensive to obtain and/or very time inappropriate
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5
Q

Which perspective are case-control studied customarily conducted in?

A
  • Retrospective
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6
Q

What are the general strengths of case-control studies?

A
  • Good for assessing multiple exposures of one outcome
  • Useful when diseases are rare
  • Useful in determining Associations
  • Less expensive than interventional and prospective cohort studies
  • Useful when ethical issues limit interventional studies
  • Useful when Disease has a long induction/latent period
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7
Q

Who defines the selection of cases?

A

The investigator, hopefully using accurate, medically reliable, efficient data sources

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8
Q

What is the difficult part of a case-control study?

A
  • Control selection
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9
Q

How do you select control population?

A
  • Want them to be as equal as possible to case group except for exposure.
  • Must be selected irrespective of exposure status
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10
Q

What sources can the control group come from?

A
  • Population
  • Institutional/Organizational/Provider
  • Spouse/Relatives/Friends
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11
Q

Case-Crossover design

A
  • When an individual can function as both an exposed individual and and unexposed individual in the same study
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12
Q

Nested Case-Control Studies

A
  • case-control studies conducted after, or out of, a prospective previous study type (cohort or interventional)
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13
Q

Where can the control for Nested Case-Control study come from?

A
  • Survivor sampling
  • Base sampling
  • Risk-Set sampling
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14
Q

Survivor Sampling

A
  • Sample of non-diseased individuals at the end of study period
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15
Q

Base Sampling

A
  • Sample of non-diseased individuals at the start of study period
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16
Q

Risk-Set Sampling

A
  • Sample of non-diseases individuals during the study period at the same time when case was diagnosed
17
Q

What are the most common biases associated with case-control studies?

A
  • Selection

- Recall

18
Q

Individual Matching

A
  • Matches individuals based on specific patient-based characteristics
19
Q

Group matching

A

Proportion of cases and proportion of controls with identical characteristics are matched.

  • requires the cases to be selected first