| Literature DB >> 15238274 |
Abstract
There is still considerable confusion and debate about the appropriate methods for analyzing prevalence studies, and a number of recent papers have argued that prevalence ratios are the preferred method and that prevalence odds ratios should not be used. These arguments assert that the prevalence ratio is obviously the better measure and the odds ratio is "unintelligible." They have often been accompanied by demonstrations that when a disease is common the prevalence ratio and the prevalence odds ratio may differ substantially. However, this does not tell us which measure is the more valid to use. In fact, the prevalence odds ratio a) estimates the incidence rate ratio with fewer assumptions than are required for the prevalence ratio; b) can be estimated using the same methods as for the odds ratio in case-control studies, namely, the Mantel-Haenszel method and logistic regression; and c) provides practical, analytical, and theoretical consistency between analyses of a prevalence study and prevalence case-control analyses based on the same study population. For these reasons, the prevalence odds ratio will continue to be one of the standard methods for analyzing prevalence studies and prevalence case-control studies.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15238274 PMCID: PMC1247374 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.6927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Findings from a hypothetical cohort study of 20,000 persons followed for 10 years.
| Exposed | Nonexposed | Ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cases | 1,813 ( | 952 ( | |
| Noncases | 8,187 ( | 9,048 ( | |
| Total population | 10,000 ( | 10,000 ( | |
| Person-years | 90,635 ( | 95,163 ( | |
| Incidence rate | 0.0200 ( | 0.0100 ( | 2.00 |
| Incidence proportion (average risk) | 0.1813 ( | 0.0952 ( | 1.90 |
| Incidence odds | 0.2214 ( | 0.1052 ( | 2.11 |
Figure 1Relationship between prevalence and incidence in a steady-state population. Abbreviations: D, duration; I, incidence; N, population; P, prevalence.
Findings from a hypothetical prevalence study of 20,000 persons.
| Exposed | Nonexposed | Ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cases | 909 ( | 476 ( | |
| Noncases | 9,091 ( | 9,524 ( | |
| Total population | 10,000 ( | 10,000 ( | |
| Prevalence | 0.0909 ( | 0.0476 ( | 1.91 |
| Prevalence odds | 0.1000 ( | 0.0500 ( | 2.00 |
Data are derived from Table 1 using Equation 2 based on the assumptions that, for both populations, the incidence rate and population size are constant over time, that the average duration of disease is 5 years, and that there is no migration of people with the disease into or out of the population.
Findings from a hypothetical prevalence case–control study based on the population represented in Table 1.
| Exposed | Nonexposed | Ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cases | 909 ( | 476 ( | |
| Controls | 676 ( | 709 ( | |
| Prevalence odds | 1.34 ( | 0.67 ( | 2.00 |