流行病学出版物中持续危险因素的分类:当前实践的调查。

Elizabeth L Turner, Joanna E Dobson, Stuart J Pocock
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引用次数: 103

摘要

背景:观察性流行病学研究报告经常对(组)连续危险因素(暴露)变量进行分类。然而,很少有系统的评估分类是如何实践或报告在文献中,没有扩展的指导方针的做法已确定。因此,我们在流行病学文献中评估了这种做法的性质。对五个流行病学期刊和五个普通医学期刊进行了两个月(2007年12月和2008年1月)的综述。所有审查持续风险因素与健康结果之间关系的文章都采用标准形式进行了调查,重点是主要风险因素。利用调查结果,我们提供了说明性的例子,并结合了来自更广泛的文献和经验的想法,我们提供了良好实践的指导方针。结果:254篇文献中,58篇纳入我们的调查。其中50例(86%)发生了分类。其中42%的人还连续分析了变量,24%的人考虑了替代分组。大多数(78%)使用3到5组。没有一篇文章完全依赖于二分法,尽管它在3篇文章中占有突出地位。分组边界的选择各不相同:34%使用分位数,18%使用等间隔类别,12%使用外部标准,34%使用其他方法,2%没有描述所使用的方法。分类风险估计最常见的是(66%)作为参照组的两两比较,通常是最高或最低(79%)。分类分析报告多以表格形式;只有20%的数字。结论:连续危险因素的分类分析是常见的。因此,我们提供了一些好的实践建议。关键问题包括预先定义适当的分组和分析策略的选择,在表格和数字中清楚地展示分组的发现,从分类分析中得出有效的结论,避免不明智地使用多种替代分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Categorisation of continuous risk factors in epidemiological publications: a survey of current practice.

Background: Reports of observational epidemiological studies often categorise (group) continuous risk factor (exposure) variables. However, there has been little systematic assessment of how categorisation is practiced or reported in the literature and no extended guidelines for the practice have been identified. Thus, we assessed the nature of such practice in the epidemiological literature. Two months (December 2007 and January 2008) of five epidemiological and five general medical journals were reviewed. All articles that examined the relationship between continuous risk factors and health outcomes were surveyed using a standard proforma, with the focus on the primary risk factor. Using the survey results we provide illustrative examples and, combined with ideas from the broader literature and from experience, we offer guidelines for good practice.

Results: Of the 254 articles reviewed, 58 were included in our survey. Categorisation occurred in 50 (86%) of them. Of those, 42% also analysed the variable continuously and 24% considered alternative groupings. Most (78%) used 3 to 5 groups. No articles relied solely on dichotomisation, although it did feature prominently in 3 articles. The choice of group boundaries varied: 34% used quantiles, 18% equally spaced categories, 12% external criteria, 34% other approaches and 2% did not describe the approach used. Categorical risk estimates were most commonly (66%) presented as pairwise comparisons to a reference group, usually the highest or lowest (79%). Reporting of categorical analysis was mostly in tables; only 20% in figures.

Conclusions: Categorical analyses of continuous risk factors are common. Accordingly, we provide recommendations for good practice. Key issues include pre-defining appropriate choice of groupings and analysis strategies, clear presentation of grouped findings in tables and figures, and drawing valid conclusions from categorical analyses, avoiding injudicious use of multiple alternative analyses.

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