Confounding and interactions Flashcards
1
Q
Define a confounder
A
- Confounding is confusion or mixing of effects:
- The factor must be independently associated with the outcome being investigated
- The factor must be associated with the exposure being investigated
- Not be in the causal pathway between exposure and outcome
2
Q
How can you evaluate confounding
A
- Determine if potential confounder (e.g., age) is associated with the disease outcome and
- Determine if frequency of potential confounder differs by exposure of interest
alternatively
- Stratify on confounder and compute the stratum-specific odds ratios (ORs):
- If OR has same direction and magnitude in each stratum but differs from overall unadjusted OR–> confounding
- If OR differs by stratum of confounder –> effect modification (interaction)
- Stratify on confounder and compute the stratum-specific odds ratios (ORs):
- If OR has same direction and magnitude in each stratum but differs from overall unadjusted OR –> confounding
- Typically a 10% change from crude to adjusted OR (Mantel Haenszel procedure) indicates presence of confounding
- Be sure to report threshold
- If OR has same direction and magnitude in each stratum but differs from overall unadjusted OR –> confounding
- If OR differs by stratum of confounder –> effect modification (interaction)
- Effect modification/interaction occurs when the measure of effect varies by a third variable (test for homogeneity)
- Joint effects of the risk factor and the third variable differs from that expected on the basis of their independent effects
3
Q
What are approaches to handling confounding
A
- In designing study:
- Restriction of eligibility criteria, e.g., only outdoor workers or only narrow age range so as to be homogeneous for disease incidence
- Individual or group matching
- Randomization
- In analysis of data:
- Stratification, using Mantel-Haenszel for a weighted summary
- Adjustment: direct or indirect standardization, multivariable regression
4
Q
What is effect modification
A
- The magnitude or direction of an association varies according to levels of a third variable
- When the incidence rate of disease in the presence of two or more risk factors differs from the incidence rate expected from their individual effects
- Commonly referred to as:
- Effect measure modification
- Interaction
- Unlike confounding, effect modification should be described and reported, rather than controlled for
- Keep in mind that the presence of effect modification depends on which measure of effect is evaluated (e.g. risk difference, risk ratio, etc.)
- Should always specify which scale was used in the analysis
- The risk difference (attributable risk) is on an additive scale
- The risk ratio is on a multiplicative scale
5
Q
Evaluating interactions and confounding by stratification
A
- First calculate the crude OR (not stratified by the possible effect modifier or confounder)
- Stratify by the possible effect modifier/confounder:
- If a the factor is a confounder, the stratum-specific ORs should be of the same direction and magnitude, and different from the crude OR
- If the factor is an effect modifier, then the stratum-specific ORs will be different from each other as well as from the crude OR
6
Q
A