| Literature DB >> 24758509 |
Antonio Gasparrini1, Michela Leone.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Measures of attributable risk are an integral part of epidemiological analyses, particularly when aimed at the planning and evaluation of public health interventions. However, the current definition of such measures does not consider any temporal relationships between exposure and risk. In this contribution, we propose extended definitions of attributable risk within the framework of distributed lag non-linear models, an approach recently proposed for modelling delayed associations in either linear or non-linear exposure-response associations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24758509 PMCID: PMC4021419 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-14-55
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Figure 1Conceptual model for the interpretation of exposure-lag-response associations: forward (left panel) and backward (right panel) perspectives.
Figure 2Association between temperature and all-cause mortality.Left panels: 3-D graphs of the exposure-lag-response risk surface. Right panels: overall cumulative exposure-response associations with temperature distributions. London 1993–2006 and Rome 1992–2010.
Total mortality fraction (%) attributable to temperature, computed backward ( ) and forward ( ), reported as overall, hot and cold components with 95% empirical confidence intervals (eCI)
| London | 845,215 | b-AF | 13.59 (10.04–17.09) | 12.95 (9.32–16.38) | 0.66 (0.52–0.80) |
| | | f-AF | 13.41 (9.72–16.87) | 12.84 (9.38–16.33) | 0.57 (0.45–0.68) |
| Rome | 395,691 | b-AF | 12.58 (9.30–15.64) | 10.84 (7.37–14.23) | 1.74 (1.12–2.37) |
| f-AF | 12.27 (8.94–15.41) | 10.72 (7.19–14.00) | 1.55 (0.95–2.13) |
London 1993–2006 and Rome 1992–2010.
Total mortality fraction (%) attributable to temperature, computed backward ( ) and forward ( ), reported as components from mild and extreme hot and cold contributions with 95% empirical confidence intervals (eCI)
| London | b-AF | 0.55 (0.45–0.64) | 12.48 (8.86–15.88) | 0.31 (0.23–0.38) | 0.36 (0.29–0.43) |
| | f-AF | 0.47 (0.40–0.53) | 12.38 (8.98–15.78) | 0.29 (0.22–0.35) | 0.28 (0.23–0.33) |
| Rome | b-AF | 0.59 (0.47–0.70) | 10.37 (6.88–13.63) | 1.45 (0.89–2.01) | 0.33 (0.25–0.40) |
| f-AF | 0.47 (0.39–0.54) | 10.27 (6.69–13.50) | 1.32 (0.75–1.85) | 0.25 (0.19–0.30) |
London 1993–2006 and Rome 1992–2010.
Figure 3Lag structure and harvesting paradox. Left panel: lag-response associations between various temperatures and all-cause mortality. Rome 1992–2010. Right panel: daily number of deaths attributable to heat, computed forward (green circles) and backward (yellow squares), and temperature trend. Rome July-Sept 1992.