| Literature DB >> 29721747 |
Sonja A Swanson1,2, Jeremy Labrecque3, Miguel A Hernán4,5,6.
Abstract
Sometimes instrumental variable methods are used to test whether a causal effect is null rather than to estimate the magnitude of a causal effect. However, when instrumental variable methods are applied to time-varying exposures, as in many Mendelian randomization studies, it is unclear what causal null hypothesis is tested. Here, we consider different versions of causal null hypotheses for time-varying exposures, show that the instrumental variable conditions alone are insufficient to test some of them, and describe additional assumptions that can be made to test a wider range of causal null hypotheses, including both sharp and average causal null hypotheses. Implications for interpretation and reporting of instrumental variable results are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Causal null hypothesis; Hypothesis testing; Instrumental variable; Mendelian randomization
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29721747 PMCID: PMC6061140 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-018-0396-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 8.082
Fig. 1Causal diagram depicting a causal instrument Z, a time-fixed treatment A, an outcome Y, and unmeasured confounders U
Fig. 2Causal diagrams depicting some violations of the instrumental conditions for a proposed instrument Z, a time-fixed treatment A, and an outcome Y. The scenarios represent a a violation of the instrumental exchageability condition via confounding, b a violation of the instrumental exchangeability condition via selection bias, and c a violation of the instrumental exclusion restriction condition via a direct path from Z to Y. In (a, b), Z would satisfy the instrumental conditions conditional on L
Fig. 3Causal diagram depicting a causal instrument Z, a treatment A measured at two time points (A0, A1), an outcome Y measured at two time points (Y0, Y1), and unmeasured confounders U
Conclusions about causal null hypotheses under the assumptions encoded in the causal diagram in Fig. 3
| Causal null hypothesis | Null association between instrument and outcome | Non-null association between instrument and outcome |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| No evidence against | Evidence against | |
| ( | No evidence against | Evidence against |
| No evidence against | No evidence against | |
| No evidence against | No evidence against | |
|
| ||
| No evidence against | If monotonic treatment effect, evidence against | |
| ( | No evidence against | If monotonic treatment effect, evidence against |
| No evidence against | No evidence against | |
| No evidence against | No evidence against | |