Adjusting adjustments: Using external data to estimate the impact of different confounder sets on published associations.

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Epidemiology Pub Date : 2024-11-22 DOI:10.1097/EDE.0000000000001821
Thomas P Ahern, Lindsay J Collin, Richard F MacLehose, Benjamin Littenberg, Laura Haines, Michaela Bonnett, Fanny Børne Asmussen, Jennifer Chen, Timothy L Lash
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Abstract

Background: A 2013 meta-analysis observed a protective association between overweight BMI (versus normal BMI) and all-cause mortality that was particularly strong in people aged ≥65. Estimates informing this meta-analysis were highly heterogeneous, and critics raised insufficient or inappropriate confounder adjustment in many studies as an explanation for the protective summary association. Using this topic as an example, we demonstrate a novel approach for external adjustment of individual studies for a uniform and sufficient confounder set before meta-analysis.

Methods: We abstracted summary data on the 33 associations comprising the age ≥65 stratum of the 2013 meta-analysis. Using an external dataset (NHANES III), we derived covariates used in each study's multivariable model of the overweight-mortality association. We then calculated a bias factor to quantify the direction and magnitude of displacement of the ratio measure of association after changing from the original adjustment set to a sufficient adjustment set. After applying bias factors to adjust original associations, we compared summary results from random effects meta-analyses with and without such adjustment.

Results: We reproduced the original meta-analysis of overweight-mortality estimates among older participants and found a protective association similar to that reported in 2013 (summary RR=0.88, 95% CI: 0.84, 0.92, I2=38.4%). After we simulated uniform adjustment of all 33 associations for a minimally sufficient confounder set (age, sex, and smoking status), the meta-analysis showed a similar summary association (summary RR=0.90, 95% CI: 0.86, 0.94), but with reduced heterogeneity (I2=34.6%).

Conclusion: Simulated uniform adjustment for a sufficient confounder set may improve rigor and promote consensus in meta-analysis.

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调整调整:使用外部数据估算不同混杂因素集对已公布关联的影响。
背景:2013 年的一项荟萃分析发现,超重体重指数(相对于正常体重指数)与全因死亡率之间存在保护性关联,这种关联在年龄≥65 岁的人群中尤为明显。为该荟萃分析提供信息的估计值差异很大,批评者提出许多研究中混杂因素调整不足或不当,以此作为保护性简要关联的解释。以这一主题为例,我们展示了一种新方法,即在进行荟萃分析之前,对单个研究进行外部调整,以获得统一且充分的混杂因素集:我们摘录了 2013 年荟萃分析中年龄≥65 岁分层的 33 项关联的汇总数据。利用外部数据集(NHANES III),我们得出了每项研究的超重-死亡率关联多变量模型中使用的协变量。然后,我们计算了一个偏倚因子,以量化从原始调整集到充分调整集后相关比率测量的偏移方向和幅度。应用偏倚因子调整原始关联后,我们比较了进行和未进行此类调整的随机效应荟萃分析的汇总结果:我们再现了老年参与者超重-死亡率估计的原始荟萃分析,发现与2013年报告的结果类似的保护性关联(RR=0.88,95% CI:0.84,0.92,I2=38.4%)。在我们模拟对所有33项关联进行统一调整,以适应最低限度的混杂因素集(年龄、性别和吸烟状况)后,荟萃分析显示了相似的关联汇总(RR汇总=0.90,95% CI:0.86,0.94),但异质性降低(I2=34.6%):结论:对足够多的混杂因素进行模拟统一调整可提高荟萃分析的严谨性并促进共识。
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来源期刊
Epidemiology
Epidemiology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
177
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Epidemiology publishes original research from all fields of epidemiology. The journal also welcomes review articles and meta-analyses, novel hypotheses, descriptions and applications of new methods, and discussions of research theory or public health policy. We give special consideration to papers from developing countries.
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