Literature DB >> 18081195

Measurement error in the explanatory variable of a binary regression: regression calibration and integrated conditional likelihood in studies of residential radon and lung cancer.

T Fearn1, D C Hill, S C Darby.   

Abstract

In epidemiology, one approach to investigating the dependence of disease risk on an explanatory variable in the presence of several confounding variables is by fitting a binary regression using a conditional likelihood, thus eliminating the nuisance parameters. When the explanatory variable is measured with error, the estimated regression coefficient is biased usually towards zero. Motivated by the need to correct for this bias in analyses that combine data from a number of case-control studies of lung cancer risk associated with exposure to residential radon, two approaches are investigated. Both employ the conditional distribution of the true explanatory variable given the measured one. The method of regression calibration uses the expected value of the true given measured variable as the covariate. The second approach integrates the conditional likelihood numerically by sampling from the distribution of the true given measured explanatory variable. The two approaches give very similar point estimates and confidence intervals not only for the motivating example but also for an artificial data set with known properties. These results and some further simulations that demonstrate correct coverage for the confidence intervals suggest that for studies of residential radon and lung cancer the regression calibration approach will perform very well, so that nothing more sophisticated is needed to correct for measurement error. Copyright (c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18081195     DOI: 10.1002/sim.3163

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stat Med        ISSN: 0277-6715            Impact factor:   2.373


  9 in total

1.  Radiation organ doses received in a nationwide cohort of U.S. radiologic technologists: methods and findings.

Authors:  Steven L Simon; Dale L Preston; Martha S Linet; Jeremy S Miller; Alice J Sigurdson; Bruce H Alexander; Deukwoo Kwon; R Craig Yoder; Parveen Bhatti; Mark P Little; Preetha Rajaraman; Dunstana Melo; Vladimir Drozdovitch; Robert M Weinstock; Michele M Doody
Journal:  Radiat Res       Date:  2014-10-31       Impact factor: 2.841

2.  Meta-analysis of case-control studies on the relationship between lung cancer and indoor radon exposure.

Authors:  Georgy Malinovsky; Ilia Yarmoshenko; Aleksey Vasilyev
Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys       Date:  2018-12-08       Impact factor: 1.925

Review 3.  Measurement Error and Environmental Epidemiology: a Policy Perspective.

Authors:  Jessie K Edwards; Alexander P Keil
Journal:  Curr Environ Health Rep       Date:  2017-03

4.  Binary regression analysis with pooled exposure measurements: a regression calibration approach.

Authors:  Zhiwei Zhang; Paul S Albert
Journal:  Biometrics       Date:  2010-07-21       Impact factor: 2.571

5.  Impact of uncertainties in exposure assessment on thyroid cancer risk among cleanup workers in Ukraine exposed due to the Chornobyl accident.

Authors:  Mark P Little; Elizabeth K Cahoon; Natalia Gudzenko; Kiyohiko Mabuchi; Vladimir Drozdovitch; Maureen Hatch; Alina V Brenner; Vibha Vij; Konstantin Chizhov; Elena Bakhanova; Natalia Trotsyuk; Victor Kryuchkov; Ivan Golovanov; Vadim Chumak; Dimitry Bazyka
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 12.434

6.  Long-Term Ambient Residential Traffic-Related Exposures and Measurement Error-Adjusted Risk of Incident Lung Cancer in the Netherlands Cohort Study on Diet and Cancer.

Authors:  Jaime E Hart; Donna Spiegelman; Rob Beelen; Gerard Hoek; Bert Brunekreef; Leo J Schouten; Piet van den Brandt
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2015-03-27       Impact factor: 9.031

7.  Impact of Uncertainties in Exposure Assessment on Thyroid Cancer Risk among Persons in Belarus Exposed as Children or Adolescents Due to the Chernobyl Accident.

Authors:  Mark P Little; Deukwoo Kwon; Lydia B Zablotska; Alina V Brenner; Elizabeth K Cahoon; Alexander V Rozhko; Olga N Polyanskaya; Victor F Minenko; Ivan Golovanov; André Bouville; Vladimir Drozdovitch
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-10-14       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Impact of uncertainties in exposure assessment on estimates of thyroid cancer risk among Ukrainian children and adolescents exposed from the Chernobyl accident.

Authors:  Mark P Little; Alexander G Kukush; Sergii V Masiuk; Sergiy Shklyar; Raymond J Carroll; Jay H Lubin; Deukwoo Kwon; Alina V Brenner; Mykola D Tronko; Kiyohiko Mabuchi; Tetiana I Bogdanova; Maureen Hatch; Lydia B Zablotska; Valeriy P Tereshchenko; Evgenia Ostroumova; André C Bouville; Vladimir Drozdovitch; Mykola I Chepurny; Lina N Kovgan; Steven L Simon; Victor M Shpak; Ilya A Likhtarev
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-29       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Shared dosimetry error in epidemiological dose-response analyses.

Authors:  Daniel O Stram; Dale L Preston; Mikhail Sokolnikov; Bruce Napier; Kenneth J Kopecky; John Boice; Harold Beck; John Till; Andre Bouville
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-03-23       Impact factor: 3.240

  9 in total

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