4.6 Article

When Is a Complete-Case Approach to Missing Data Valid? The Importance of Effect-Measure Modification

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 189, Issue 12, Pages 1583-1589

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwaa124

Keywords

complete-case analysis; conditional estimates; epidemiologic methods; heterogeneity; marginal estimates; missing data; risk differences

Funding

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [1DP2HD084070-01]
  2. National Institute on Aging [R01 AG056479]

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When estimating causal effects, careful handling of missing data is needed to avoid bias. Complete-case analysis is commonly used in epidemiologic analyses. Previous work has shown that covariate-stratified effect estimates from complete-case analysis are unbiased when missingness is independent of the outcome conditional on the exposure and covariates. Here, we assess the bias of complete-case analysis for adjusted marginal effects when confounding is present under various causal structures of missing data. We show that estimation of the marginal risk difference requires an unbiased estimate of the unconditional joint distribution of confounders and any other covariates required for conditional independence of missingness and outcome. The dependence of missing data on these covariates must be considered to obtain a valid estimate of the covariate distribution. If none of these covariates are effect-measure modifiers on the absolute scale, however, the marginal risk difference will equal the stratified risk differences and the complete-case analysis will be unbiased when the stratified effect estimates are unbiased. Estimation of unbiased marginal effects in complete-case analysis therefore requires close consideration of causal structure and effect-measure modification.

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