Jonathan M Snowden1,2, Marit L Bovbjerg3, Mekhala Dissanayake2, Olga Basso4,5. 1. School of Public Health, Oregon Health and Science University-Portland State University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd, Mail Code: CB-669, Portland, OR 97239-3098, USA. 2. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Oregon Health and Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd, Mail Code: L-466, Portland, OR 97239-3098, USA. 3. College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Oregon State University, Milam Hall 103, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA. 4. Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology; Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre. 5. Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health McGill University, Purvis Hall, 1020 Pine Avenue West, Montreal QC H3A 1A2, Canada.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Human reproduction is a common process and one that unfolds over a relatively short time, but pregnancy and birth processes are challenging to study. Selection occurs at every step of this process (e.g., infertility, early pregnancy loss, and stillbirth), adding substantial bias to estimated exposure-outcome associations. Here we focus on selection in perinatal epidemiology, specifically, how it affects research question formulation, feasible study designs, and interpretation of results. RECENT FINDINGS: Approaches have recently been proposed to address selection issues in perinatal epidemiology. One such approach is the ongoing pregnancies denominator for gestation-stratified analyses of infant outcomes. Similarly, bias resulting from left truncation has recently been termed "live birth bias," and a proposed solution is to control for common causes of selection variables (e.g., fecundity, fetal loss) and birth outcomes. However, these approaches have theoretical shortcomings, conflicting with the foundational epidemiologic concept of populations at risk for a given outcome. SUMMARY: We engage with epidemiologic theory and employ thought experiments to demonstrate the problems of using denominators that include units not "at risk" of the outcome. Fundamental (and commonsense) concerns of outcome definition and analysis (e.g., ensuring that all study participants are at risk for the outcome) should take precedence in formulating questions and analysis approach, as should choosing questions that stakeholders care about. Selection and resulting biases in human reproductive processes complicate estimation of unbiased exposure- outcome associations, but we should not focus solely (or even mostly) on minimizing such biases.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Human reproduction is a common process and one that unfolds over a relatively short time, but pregnancy and birth processes are challenging to study. Selection occurs at every step of this process (e.g., infertility, early pregnancy loss, and stillbirth), adding substantial bias to estimated exposure-outcome associations. Here we focus on selection in perinatal epidemiology, specifically, how it affects research question formulation, feasible study designs, and interpretation of results. RECENT FINDINGS: Approaches have recently been proposed to address selection issues in perinatal epidemiology. One such approach is the ongoing pregnancies denominator for gestation-stratified analyses of infant outcomes. Similarly, bias resulting from left truncation has recently been termed "live birth bias," and a proposed solution is to control for common causes of selection variables (e.g., fecundity, fetal loss) and birth outcomes. However, these approaches have theoretical shortcomings, conflicting with the foundational epidemiologic concept of populations at risk for a given outcome. SUMMARY: We engage with epidemiologic theory and employ thought experiments to demonstrate the problems of using denominators that include units not "at risk" of the outcome. Fundamental (and commonsense) concerns of outcome definition and analysis (e.g., ensuring that all study participants are at risk for the outcome) should take precedence in formulating questions and analysis approach, as should choosing questions that stakeholders care about. Selection and resulting biases in human reproductive processes complicate estimation of unbiased exposure- outcome associations, but we should not focus solely (or even mostly) on minimizing such biases.
Entities:
Keywords:
Selection bias; birth outcomes; causation; early pregnancy loss; infertility; population at risk
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