Interpreting Epidemiological Findings (2) Flashcards
What is confounding?
The effect of an extraneous variable that wholly or partially accounts for the apparent effects of the study exposure, or that masks an underlying true association
a confounding variable is a third variable which leads to bias in the estimate of association between outcome and exposure
What can confounding lead to?
Biased estimates
How can you identify confounding?
Knowledge of the subject matter: you could undertake an evidence review and see what other people have proposed or found
Test by the three criteria: associated with exposure in the source population; associated with the outcome in the absence of the exposure; not a consequence of the exposure
Stratification: we can look at the difference of apparent effect within different population strata
Compare the crude and adjust statistical estimate
What are the three conditions for confounding?
Associated with the exposure in the source population
Associated with the outcome in the absence of the exposure
Not a consequence of the exposure
How do you conduct stratification?
Compare stratum specific estimates with the estimate you get when you analyse the date from the study
What after conducting stratification might indicate confounding?
Pooled estimate is considerably different from what you expect from stratum specific estimates
What is effect modification?
Where the magnitude of the effect of an exposure variable on an outcome variable differs depending on a third variable
- not a problem. It is a natural phenomenon.
Effect modification – exists when the strength of an association varies over different levels of a third variable
Shouldn’t be controlled for + happens naturally
Take into account when reporting
When detected – conduct stratified analysis
How can you test for effect modification?
- Breslow-Day test
- Q test
- Interaction terms in regression models
What is synergism in relation to effect modification ?
The effect modifier potentiates the affect of the exposure
What is antagonism in relation to effect modification?
The effect modifier demeans the effect of the exposure
What are adjusted models used for?
Identification of potential confounding
And used to account for it
What is a crude model?
Univariate analysis of exposure vs outcome
What does the crude model do?
Simply looks at the impact of the exposure on the outcome – with no consideration of anything else
What is an adjusted model?
Multivariate analysis of a range of exposures vs. outcome
What is multivariate analysis?
Multiple potential exposures have been included
The inference is that the outputs of these analyses mean that holding all other adjusted variables equal, X is the association between exposure and outcome