Cohort studies Flashcards

1
Q

Cohort study

A

Observational study - we don’t intervene - just observe

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2
Q

Features of cohort study

A
  1. Cohort that is group at risk of outcome (disease-free)
  2. Cohort is classified according to exposure
  3. Observe subjects longitudinally
  4. Compare risk of outcome in those with/without exposure
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3
Q

Types of cohort study

A

Retrospective or Historical

Prospective or concurrent
Differ in the timing of collecting exposure and disease information

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4
Q

prospective

A
  1. Today we identify and measure our exposure
  2. Follow them up into the future
  3. At some point enough outcomes occur -> then do analysis

At the start of the study none of the outcomes have occured yet

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5
Q

retrospective

A
  1. Today we identify population and assess exposure in the past
  2. then do analysis of outcomes
  • ALL the outcomes have already occured at the time we start the study
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6
Q

Pros and cons of prospective cohort studies

A

Exposure and outcome have not yet taken place when the study is initiated

  • Can determine which variables to measure and how, including changes over time
  • Can reduce selection bias as outcome is yet to occur

Long time and expensive

May not be ethical to wait for answer

Studies of rare disease or diseases with long latency may be difficult

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7
Q

Retrospective

A

Exposure and outcome have taken place before the study is initiated

  • Variables may not be available and little control of method or consistency of measurement
    Missing data
  • selection bias more likely as exposure and outcome have already occured
  • can be done relatively quickly and may be cheap
  • good for rare diseases with long latency
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8
Q

Biobank studies

A
  • Vast range of different variables collected prospectively at baseline and subsequently
  • Blood and urine samples
  • No specific research question asked at the time of data collection
  • Studies nested with the Biobank described as prospective
    1. Data collected prospectively
    2. Although specific question asked retrospectively
  • Contrast with database studies - retrospective
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9
Q

Designing a cohort study

A
  1. Research question (PICO)
  2. Is a cohort study the right decision?
Stages:
1. DEsign 
Selection of study population
2. Data collection
3. Analysis 

Issues:
1. Bias, confounding, random error

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10
Q

Non-participation or non-response bias

A

Affects power to detect an association

Certain groups may be over or under represented

Non-response bias (only if non-response is related to exposure and outcome)

Type of selection bias

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11
Q

Losses to follow-up and bias

A

Losses inevitable in most cohort studies

Loss of participants in follow-up reduces the power and precision of the study

Differential loss to follow-up, with respect to baseline characteristics and outcome may lead to bias

High loss to follow-up doesn’t mean bias is introduced but makes it more likely

Rules of thumb: <5% loss leads to little bias, >20% serious threats to validity

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12
Q

Lossed to follow-up

-> how to avoid?

A

Maintaining a high follow-up rate

  • choice of study population (where contact can be easily maintained)
  • incentives
  • linkage/flagging (patient registers, patient records)
  • shorter follow-up
  • can be labour intensive

BEST to avoid loss but you can compare baseline characteristics of those lost vs. not

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13
Q

Survivor bias (prevalent cohort bias)

A

Survival bias is a type of sampling error or selection bias that occurs when the selection process of a trial favours certain individuals who made it past a certain obstacle or point in time and ignores the individuals who did not (and are generally less visible).

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14
Q

Outcome data collection in cohort studies

A
  • Some people leave a study before the end
  • SOmething might happen that prevents the outcome of interest from happening, e.g.
    1. Outcome=heart attack (some may have preventive surgery)
    2. Outcome=recurrence of cancer (some may die from another cause first)
    3. Some people may still not have experienced the outcome by the end of the study

Called CENSORED
- must take into account for analysis

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15
Q

Risk ratio

A

-risk of disease in exposed individuals relative to unexposed

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16
Q

Incidence rate ratio -> more applicable in cohort studies

A

Rate ratio is the ratio of the rate of disease in exposed individuals relative to unexposed

17
Q

Analysis of cohort studies

A

rate ratios
Graphical method:Kaplan Meier Kurve

If several confounding variables -> think about regression methods