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Theory and Methods

Case Definition and Design Sensitivity

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Pages 1457-1468 | Received 01 Apr 2012, Published online: 19 Dec 2013
 

Abstract

In a case-referent study, cases of disease are compared to noncases with respect to their antecedent exposure to a treatment in an effort to determine whether exposure causes some cases of the disease. Because exposure is not randomly assigned in the population, as it would be if the population were a vast randomized trial, exposed and unexposed subjects may differ prior to exposure with respect to covariates that may or may not have been measured. After controlling for measured preexposure differences, for instance by matching, a sensitivity analysis asks about the magnitude of bias from unmeasured covariates that would need to be present to alter the conclusions of a study that presumed matching for observed covariates removes all bias. The definition of a case of disease affects sensitivity to unmeasured bias. We explore this issue using: (i) an asymptotic tool, the design sensitivity, (ii) a simulation for finite samples, and (iii) an example. Under favorable circumstances, a narrower case definition can yield an increase in the design sensitivity, and hence an increase in the power of a sensitivity analysis. Also, we discuss an adaptive method that seeks to discover the best case definition from the data at hand while controlling for multiple testing. An implementation in R is available as SensitivityCaseControl.

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by grant SES-1260782 from the Measurement, Methodology, and Statistics Program of the U.S. National Science Foundation, grant RC4MH092722 from the National Institute of Mental Health, grant U54DE019285 from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, and grant R37-AI032042 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

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