Literature DB >> 20332366

Estimating duration in partnership studies: issues, methods and examples.

Bart Burington1, James P Hughes, William L H Whittington, Brad Stoner, Geoff Garnett, Sevgi O Aral, King K Holmes.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Understanding the time course of sexual partnerships is important for understanding sexual behaviour, transmission risks for sexually transmitted infections (STI) and development of mathematical models of disease transmission. STUDY
DESIGN: The authors describe issues and biases relating to censoring, truncation and sampling that arise when estimating partnership duration. Recommendations for study design and analysis methods are presented and illustrated using data from a sexual-behaviour survey that enrolled individuals from an adolescent-health clinic and two STD clinics. Survey participants were queried, for each of (up to) four partnerships in the last 3 months, about the month and year of first sex, the number of days since last sex and whether partnerships were limited to single encounters. Participants were followed every 4 months for up to 1 year.
RESULTS: After adjustment for censoring and truncation, the estimated median duration of sexual partnerships declined from 9 months (unadjusted) to 1.6 months (adjusted). Similarly, adjustment for censoring and truncation reduced the bias in relative risks for the effect of age in a Cox model. Other approaches, such as weighted estimation, also reduced bias in the estimated duration distribution.
CONCLUSION: Methods are available for estimating partnership duration from censored and truncated samples. Ignoring censoring, truncation and other sampling issues results in biased estimates.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20332366      PMCID: PMC3050014          DOI: 10.1136/sti.2009.037960

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sex Transm Infect        ISSN: 1368-4973            Impact factor:   3.519


  10 in total

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7.  Contact tracing and the estimation of sexual mixing patterns: the epidemiology of gonococcal infections.

Authors:  G P Garnett; R M Anderson
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8.  Mind the gap: the role of time between sex with two consecutive partners on the transmission dynamics of gonorrhea.

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  10 in total
  11 in total

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3.  A Sexual Partnership Duration: Characterizing Sampling Conditions That Permit unbiased Estimation of Survivorship and Effect on It of Covariates.

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7.  Transmission of Chlamydia trachomatis through sexual partnerships: a comparison between three individual-based models and empirical data.

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8.  Concurrent partnerships, acute infection and HIV epidemic dynamics among young adults in Zimbabwe.

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9.  Sexual partnership patterns in malawi: implications for HIV/STI transmission.

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10.  Age- and gender-specific estimates of partnership formation and dissolution rates in the Seattle sex survey.

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