Literature DB >> 10468428

Control for seasonal variation and time trend in case-crossover studies of acute effects of environmental exposures.

T F Bateson1, J Schwartz.   

Abstract

The case-crossover study design is used to study the triggers of acute outcomes in populations. It controls for all measured and unmeasured time-invariant confounders by design. Studies of environmental triggers of morbidity are potentially confounded by temporal trends in the outcome owing to omitted covariates. We conducted a simulation study of the case-crossover design's ability to control for temporal confounding patterns by design rather than through modeling. We compared five case-crossover control sampling strategies including the matched pair, a symmetric bi-directional, a total history approach, and two approaches proposed by Navidi (Biometrics 1998;54:596-605). We simulated true relative risks (RR) of 1.10 and 2.00 and induced confounding by seasonal patterns as well as linear and nonlinear long-term trends to yield estimated RR values as high as 3.18. The symmetric bi-directional approach was compared across four lag times and controlled for temporal confounding best when the lag was shortest. With a 1-week lag, it estimated the RR values as 1.10 and 2.01. The four other approaches failed to control for the temporal trends. Our simulations show that the symmetric bi-directional case-crossover design can substantially control for temporal confounding by design although it is not as efficient (66%) as Poisson regression analysis.

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10468428

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epidemiology        ISSN: 1044-3983            Impact factor:   4.822


  70 in total

Review 1.  Appending epidemiological studies to conventional case-control studies (hybride case-control studies).

Authors:  Andreas Stang; Karl-Heinz Jöckel
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 8.082

2.  The effects of particulate air pollution on daily deaths: a multi-city case crossover analysis.

Authors:  J Schwartz
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 4.402

3.  A bootstrap method to avoid the effect of concurvity in generalised additive models in time series studies of air pollution.

Authors:  Adolfo Figueiras; Javier Roca-Pardiñas; Carmen Cadarso-Suárez
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 3.710

Review 4.  A call for reporting the relevant exposure term in air pollution case-crossover studies.

Authors:  Nino Künzli; Christian Schindler
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 3.710

5.  Temperature, temperature extremes, and mortality: a study of acclimatisation and effect modification in 50 US cities.

Authors:  M Medina-Ramón; J Schwartz
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2007-06-28       Impact factor: 4.402

6.  Acute Associations Between Outdoor Temperature and Premature Rupture of Membranes.

Authors:  Sandie Ha; Danping Liu; Yeyi Zhu; Seth Sherman; Pauline Mendola
Journal:  Epidemiology       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 4.822

7.  Within-community Variation in Violence and Risk of Self-harm in California: A Population-based Case-crossover Study.

Authors:  Ellicott C Matthay; Kara E Rudolph; Dana E Goin; Kriszta Farkas; Jennifer Skeem; Jennifer Ahern
Journal:  Epidemiology       Date:  2019-03       Impact factor: 4.822

8.  The short-term effect of 24-h average and peak air pollution on mortality in Oslo, Norway.

Authors:  Christian Madsen; Pål Rosland; Dominic Anthony Hoff; Wenche Nystad; Per Nafstad; Oyvind Erik Naess
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2012-07-27       Impact factor: 8.082

9.  Acute air pollution exposure and NICU admission: a case-crossover analysis.

Authors:  Indulaxmi Seeni; Andrew Williams; Carrie Nobles; Zhen Chen; Seth Sherman; Pauline Mendola
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2019-07-12       Impact factor: 3.797

10.  Bayesian analysis of time-series data under case-crossover designs: posterior equivalence and inference.

Authors:  Shi Li; Bhramar Mukherjee; Stuart Batterman; Malay Ghosh
Journal:  Biometrics       Date:  2013-11-29       Impact factor: 2.571

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