Oct 4 Flashcards
Describe Selection Bias in RCTs
- with respect to randomization; if we don’t adequately generate the random sequences (can have runs; if you’re making a random sequence of 10 sometimes it might end up that you have 9 assigned to A and 1 assigned to B so you get a run of people entering your study getting assigned to A- if they are early morning people, different reponse to people, etc. this could bring in selection bias)
- allocation concealment; we don’t know who is assigned to what until the moment they are assigned (compromisation in this process ie. research assistant administering therapy- if they know what the next assignment is and you think the next person is going to do really well on this treatment you might give it but if you think the next person won’t do well on this treatment you might say oh let’s just give it to the next person
Describe Performance Bias in RCTs
- differences that occur due to knowledge of intervention allocation in either the resercher or the participant
- results in differences in the care received by the intervention and control groups in a trial that are over and above the intervention that are being compared
- performance bias: whether or not we’ve done a good job of blinding
- if blinding has been done properly, this usually means we have taken care of performance bias so not an issue
What is attrition bias in RCTs
- also in prospective cohort studies
- incomplete outcome data/losses to follow up
- anytime you have lots of people dropping out, it compromises your ability to say something about the treatment
- this becomes more important when the drop out is differential (one group has higher dropout rate than others. if that is related to treatment or outcomes, that is a problem)
What is detection bias in RCTs
- similar to performance bias except this is the way we report events
- want know the people assessing the outcome- are they biased about deciding who is a case/control, who has developed outcome/hasn’t
- if we know the treatment someone was assigned to, you might be more likely to say one over the other
What bias are case control studies more susceptible to than other studies?
- recall bias
- we select people once they are already a case and ask them to remember exposure histories
- if exposure histories happened a long time ago they may be recalled differently in cases than controls
What is a common bias seen in cohort studies?
- selection bias because there could be different rates of loss to follow up in the exposed and unexposed groups
- whatever factors that lead people to be exposed may lead them to not be good at participating in studies (or vice versa)
- people that stay in study and tend to be interested in their health are different than people who do not
Describe random error
-reduces precision of the estimates (OR, RR, etc.)
Describe systematic error
- more of an issue of getting the wrong answer
- reduces validity or accuracy of the estimates
- eg. scale routinely weighing people 10lbs less than they really are
Fill in the blanks
Figure A: Accurate and precise, no error (can do a number of studies and each study gets close to the truth)
Figure B: precise, but not accurate. Systematic error. Lots of studies cluster in the same area (precise) but they are far from the truth. All studies are misestimating truth by about the same amount.
Figure C: Accurate, but not precise. Random error. Number of studies all aren’t going to get same answer due to random variability in populations they study, outcomes they assess, but dots are more spread out than in Figure A where everything was true.
Figure D: Neither accurate nor precise. Systematic and random error. All studies get wrong answers.
What is internal validity?
- we do a study and it measures what we intend it to measure
- gives unbiased estimate of true effect in that study
- study was designed properly, used the best methods, collected data in best way we could, analysis was high quality
What is external validity?
- refers to generalization
- could get a specific population and do a well controlled study but all of the people that contribute to that study might not be representative of the entire population
What is confounding?
- refers to the “mixing” of the effect of the exposure with the effect of another factor (the confounder)
- distorts the estimated measure of association
What is a confounder?
- a variable that is: a risk factor for the disease of interest (independent of exposure), associated with the exposure of interest (without being a consequence of the exposure)
- not in the causal pathway
exposure variable –> variable in causal pathway (happens as the result of an exposure that then leads to disease) –> diesease variable
Is persistent coughing a confounder with smoking and SUI?
- first criterion satisfied: coughing causes an increase in intra-abdominal pressure which leads to SUI (risk factor)
- any coughing may lead to SUI regardless of smoking status
- however, smoking increases frequency/intensity of coughing so smokers may have more bouts of SUI but it’s happening because coughing is the mechanism by which smoking affects SUI
- smoking –> coughing –> SUI (in causal pathway) therfore is not a confounder
What studies to confounders affect?
- all observational study designs
- without randomization, there is no way to be certain that possible confounders are distributed evenly across the groups
- uneven distribution of confounders causes biased ORs and RRs