4.5 Article

Bias formulas for external adjustment and sensitivity analysis of unmeasured confounders

Journal

ANNALS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 637-646

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2008.04.003

Keywords

bias; bias adjustment; confounding; epidemiologic methods; odds ratio; risk difference; risk ratio; sensitivity analysis; unmeasured confounders

Funding

  1. Board of the Council for Earth and Life Sciences [825.06.026]
  2. Centre for Longitudinal Studies
  3. Institute of Education
  4. National Child Development Study
  5. National Birthday Trust Fund
  6. National Children's Bureau
  7. City University Social Statistics Research Unit

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PURPOSE: Uncontrolled confounders are an important source of bias in epidermiologic studies. The authors review and derive a set of parallel simple formulas for bias factors in the risk difference, risk ratio, and odds ratio from studies with an unmeasured polytomous confounder and a dichotomous exposure and outcome. METHODS: The authors show how the bias formulas are related to and are sometimes simpler than earlier formulas. The article contains three examples, including a Monte Carlo sensitivity analysis of a preadjusted or conditional estimate. RESULTS: All the bias expressions can be given parallel formulations as the difference or ratio of (i) the Sum across confounder strata of each exposure-stratified confounder-outcome effect measure multiplied by the confounder prevalences among the exposed and (ii) the sum across confounder strata of the same effect measure multiplied by the confounder prevalences among the unexposed. The basic formulas can be applied to scenarios with a polytomous confounder, exposure, or outcome. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to aiding design and analysis strategies for confounder control, the bias for, mulas provide a link between classical standardization decompositions of demography and classical bias formulas of epidemiology. They are also useful in constructing general programs for sensitivity analysis and more elaborate probabilistic risk analyses.

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