300 likes | 455 Views
Avoiding Bias Due to Unmeasured Covariates. Presentations in this series Introduction Self -matching Proxies Intermediates Instruments Equipoise. Alec Walker. X. Randomization. Self-matching. Proxies. Proxies. Intermediates. Intermediates. D. T. X. Randomization. Self-matching.
E N D
Avoiding Bias Due toUnmeasured Covariates Presentations in this series Introduction Self-matching Proxies Intermediates Instruments Equipoise Alec Walker
X Randomization Self-matching Proxies Proxies Intermediates Intermediates D T
X Randomization Self-matching Proxies Proxies Intermediates Intermediates Instruments D T
An instrument is a measured variable that is • known to be uncorrelated with the unmeasured predictors • a correlate of treatment • not in itself a direct cause of the outcome • Any correlation between the instrument and outcome is • unconfounded by unmeasured predictors • mediated only by treatment • permitting unconfounded estimates of treatment effect
Does adherence to beta-blocker therapy reduce hospitalization for CHF? Adherence Hospital Admission
Severity of disease is a confounder Adherence Severity Hospital Admission
Severity is unmeasured Adherence Severity Hospital Admission
Copay also influences adherence In the United States, the amount that a patient must pay for a drug (“copayment”) depends on administrative arrangements between the employer and the private insurance company. Copayment Adherence Severity Hospital Admission
A question in health economics Copayment To what degree is Copayment a cause of Hospital Admission? Hospital Admission
A question in health economics Copayment Adherence is an intermediate variable. Adherence Hospital Admission
A question in health economics Severity confounds the relation between Adherence and Hospital Admission, but because Severity is unrelated to Copayment, … Copayment Adherence Severity Hospital Admission
A question in health economics Copayment Severity of disease does not confound the association between Copayment and Hospital Admission and is ignorable for the health economist. Adherence Severity Hospital Admission
Adherence varies with • Severity • Copayment for drug • Severity • Unmeasured • Predicts hospitalization, and therefore is a • Confounder of adherence • Copayment for drug • Well-measured • Does not predict hospitalization • Not correlated with Severity • The association between Copayment and Hospitalization is not confounded by severity
Estimating the effect of adherence Copayment Adherence Severity Hospital Admission If ∆Copayment affects hospital admission rates, it can only be through the mediating effect of ∆Adherence. A test of the effect of Copaymentis a test of the effect of Adherence.
Estimating the effect of adherence Copayment Adherence Severity Hospital Admission If ∆Copayment affects hospital admission rates, it can only be through the mediating effect of ∆Adherence. The size of the effect of adherence can be deduced from the associations between copay and (1) adherence and (2) admission rates.
Estimating the effect of adherence Copayment, unconfounded by severity, is an instrument for adherence. Copayment Adherence Severity Hospital Admission If ∆Copayment affects hospital admission rates, it can only be through the mediating effect of ∆Adherence. The size of the effect of adherence can be deduced from the associations between copay and (1) adherence and (2) admission rates.
The instrumental variable estimate • The slope of the regression line of outcome variable against the instrument Divided by • The slope of the regression line of the predictor variable against the instrument All regressions are made conditionally on other known predictors of outcome and target variable, e.g. with covariate control.
Copayment, adherence to beta blockers, and hospital admission for CHF • Members of a large health plan • With a diagnosis of CHF • Treatment with a single beta blocker in 2002 • Adherence in 2002 measured by days treated / days eligible • Many medical covariates identified in 2002 diagnoses, drugs, costs • Copay in 2002 identified for the beta blocker of treatment • Tiers • Variations according to employer contract • CHF hospitalization if any identified in 2003 Cole JA et al 2006
Component regressions Predict the Outcome • Hospitalization for CHF (yes/no) in 2003 As a function of the fitted value for • Adherence in 2002 Predict the Explanatory Variable • Adherence in 2002 As a function of observed values • Copayment in 2002
Fitted effects of an increase in copay per $10 Δ Copayment +0.8% ∆ Hospitalization -1.8% ∆ Adherence
Fitted effects of an increase in copay per $10 Δ Copayment +0.8% ∆ Hospitalization -1.8% ∆ Adherence +4.4% ∆ Hospitalization -10% ∆ Adherence
Component regressions Predict the Outcome • Hospitalization for CHF (yes/no) in 2003 As a function of the fitted value for • Adherence in 2002 Second stage Predict the Explanatory Variable • Adherence in 2002 As a function of observed values • Copayment in 2002 First stage Any factor that is correlated with copayment and that predicts outcome will invalidate copayment as an instrument. We can however, condition on that factor by including it in a larger regression model.
Relax the assumptions through modeling Predict the Outcome • Hospitalization for CHF in 2003 As a function of the fitted value for • Adherence in 2002 with concurrent control for • Type of beta-blocker 2002 • Other diseases 2002 • Age, region, sex 2002 Predict the Explanatory Variable • Adherence in 2002 As a function of observed values • Copayment in 2002 with concurrent control for • Type of beta-blocker 2002 • Other diseases 2002 • Age, region, sex 2002 Unmeasured characteristics that are not associated with Copayment conditionally on type of beta-blocker, other disease, age, region and sex do not affect the coefficient associated with copayment for either regression.
Predictors of “exposure” (First Stage) are of interest 2002 Fitted 2002 Adherence Characteristic Effect SE $10 higher copayment -1.8% 0.2% Tablets per day -2.1% 0.6% Acute Myocardial Infarction +2.6% 0.9% Cardiac Dysrhythmias +2.1% 0.6% Chronic renal failure -2.4% 1.0% Metoprololtartarate* -5.9% 1.0% Metoprolol succinate* -2.5% 1.0% Atenolol* -4.1% 1.1% *Versus carvedilol
Examples of instruments in drug studies • Distance to care provider • Preference-based • Region • Hospital • Team • Provider • Day of week • Calendar time • Randomized encouragement • Copayment From: Brookhart MA, Rassen JA, Schneeweiss S. Instrumental variable methods in comparative safety and effectiveness research. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2010 Jun;19(6):537-54.
Questions to ask about instruments • How strongly does the Instrument predict the Target Exposure? • Perfect No room for unmeasured confounders • Weak Highly model-dependent • Does the Instrument predict Outcome? • Directly? --> Do not use • Through unmeasured covariates? --> Do not use • Through measured covariates? (Other treatments?) • Including the covariates makes results model-dependent • Match on or balance on covariates • Does the Instrument affect the effect of exposure?
Reporting instruments in drug studies • Justify the motivation • Describe the theoretical basis • Report the strength of the instrument • Report risk factors in relation to the instrument • Report other treatments in relation to the instrument • Consider to whom the effect really generalizes From: Brookhart MA, Rassen JA, Schneeweiss S. Instrumental variable methods in comparative safety and effectiveness research. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2010 Jun;19(6):537-54.