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Confounding

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Title: Confounding


1
Confounding
  • Dr. Sunita Dodani
  • Assistant Professor
  • Family Medicine, CHS
  • The Aga Khan University
  • Pakistan

2
Learning objectives
  • To understand the role of confounders in a study
  • To learn relationship between an exposure,
    disease and potential confounding factors
  • To understand difference between confounding and
    effect modification
  • To learn methods to control confounding in study
    designs and in data analysis

3
Performance objectives
  • After this lecture the student will be able to
  • Differentiate the role of a confounder and a
    exposure in a study
  • Use methods to control effects of confounders in
    research projects

4
Confounding
  • Confounding occurs when two factors are
    associated with each other, or travel together
    and the effect of one is confused with or
    distorted by the effect of the other.
  • A confounder is a variable which is associated
    with the exposure, and independent of that
    exposure is a risk factor of the disease

5
Confounding
  • Examples
  • Study one found an association with smoking and
    loss of hairs.
  • The study was confounded by age
  • Study two found improved outcome for maternal
    centers when compared to hospitals
  • Study might be confounded by highly motivated
    volunteers that may have selected these centers
    as an option

6
Confounding
  • Confounders are generally correlates of other
    causal factors
  • HSV-2
  • Sexual activity
  • HPV Cervical cancer
  • A confounder cannot be an intermediate link
  • in the causal pathway between exposure and
    disease

7
Confounding
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  • In other words, confounding is a variable that is
    associated with the predictor variable and is a
    cause of the outcome variable
  • Aside from bias, confounding is often the likely
    alternative explanation to cause-effect and the
    most important one to try to rule out.
  • In contrast to bias, confounding can be
    controlled at several levels of a study

8
Effect modification
  • Effect modification is a type of interaction
  • When the strength of the relationship between two
    variables is different with respect to some third
    variable called effect modifier.

9
Effect modification
  • EXAMPLES 1
  • relationship between dose of thiazide and risk
    of sudden death.addition of K sparing drug
    modifies the effect at several doses.
  • effect modifier.. K sparing drug

10
Effect modification
  • Example 2
  • People who take monoamine oxidase inhibitors
    (MAOI) are at risk of stroke if they eat certain
    foods such as cheese.
  • effect modifier. MAOI
  • MAOI is not associated with eating cheese. This
    is not a confounder

11
Coping with confounders
  • In the design phase
  • Investigators should be aware of confounders and
    able to control them
  • First list the variables (like age sex) that
    may be associated with the predictor variable of
    interest as well as cause of the outcome

12
Coping with confounders
  • Two design phase strategies
  • Specification
  • Matching
  • Both sampling strategies
  • Specification
  • Design inclusion criteria that specify a value
    of the potential confounder and exclude everyone
    with a different value
  • e.g In coffee and MI , only non smokers could be
    included in the study.if an association observed
    b/w coffee and MI, it obviously could not be due
    to smoking

13
Coping with confounders
  • Specification
  • Advantages
  • Easily understood
  • Focuses only on subjects for the research
    question at hand
  • Disadvantages
  • Limits generalizability
  • May make it difficult to acquire adequate sample
    size

14
Coping with confounders
  • Matching (mostly in case control studies)
  • Selection of cases and controls with matching
    values of the confounding variable
  • Pair wise matching
  • e.g in coffee drinking study as a predictor of
    MI, each case (a patient with MI) could be
    matched with one or more controls that smoked
    roughly the same amount as the case (10-20
    cigarettes/day)

15
Coping with confounders
  • Matching
  • Advantages
  • Can eliminate influence of strong confounders
  • Can increase precision (power) by balancing the
    number of cases and controls in each stratum
  • May be sampling convenience making it easier to
    select controls

16
Coping with confounders
  • Matching
  • Disadvantages
  • Time consuming
  • Requires early decision as to which variables are
    predictors and which are confounders
  • Requires matched analysis
  • Creates the danger of over matching( matching on
    a factor which is not a founder, thereby reducing
    power)

17
Coping with confounders
  • In the Analysis
  • Stratification
  • Adjustment
  • Stratification
  • Ensures that only cases and controls with similar
    level of a potential confounding variable are
    compared.
  • It involves segregating the subjects into strata.

18
Coping with confounders
  • Stratification
  • Advantages
  • Easily understood
  • Flexible and reversible
  • Can choose which variable to stratify upon after
    data collection

19
Coping with confounders
  • Stratification
  • Disadvantages
  • Number of strata limited by sample size needed
    for each stratum
  • Few co variables can be considered
  • Few strata per co variable leads to less complete
    control of confounding

20
Coping with confounders
  • Statistical Adjustment
  • Several statistical techniques are available to
    adjust for confounders.
  • These techniques model the nature of the
    associations among the variable to isolate the
    effects of predictor variables and confounders
  • This require software for multivariate analysis

21
Coping with confounders
  • Statistical Adjustment
  • Advantages
  • Multiple confounders can be controlled
    simultaneously
  • Information in continuous variables can be fully
    used
  • Flexible and reversible

22
Coping with confounders
  • Statistical Adjustment
  • Disadvantages
  • Model may not fit
  • Inaccurate estimates of strength of effect (if
    model does not fit predictor-outcome
    relationship)
  • Results may be hard to understand
  • Relevant co variables must have been measured
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