Spline-based self-controlled case series method
Autor: | Yonas Ghebremichael-Weldeselassie, C. Paddy Farrington, Heather Whitaker |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Statistics and Probability
Epidemiology Clinical study design Confounding Nonparametric statistics Regression analysis 01 natural sciences 3. Good health 010104 statistics & probability 03 medical and health sciences Spline (mathematics) Bayes' theorem 0302 clinical medicine Statistics Econometrics 030212 general & internal medicine 0101 mathematics Risk assessment Likelihood function Mathematics |
Zdroj: | Statistics in Medicine. 36:3022-3038 |
ISSN: | 0277-6715 |
DOI: | 10.1002/sim.7311 |
Popis: | The self-controlled case series (SCCS) method is an alternative to study designs such as cohort and case control methods and is used to investigate potential associations between the timing of vaccine or other drug exposures and adverse events. It requires information only on cases, individuals who have experienced the adverse event at least once, and automatically controls all fixed confounding variables that could modify the true association between exposure and adverse event. Time-varying confounders such as age, on the other hand, are not automatically controlled and must be allowed for explicitly. The original SCCS method used step functions to represent risk periods (windows of exposed time) and age effects. Hence, exposure risk periods and/or age groups have to be prespecified a priori, but a poor choice of group boundaries may lead to biased estimates. In this paper, we propose a nonparametric SCCS method in which both age and exposure effects are represented by spline functions at the same time. To avoid a numerical integration of the product of these two spline functions in the likelihood function of the SCCS method, we defined the first, second, and third integrals of I-splines based on the definition of integrals of M-splines. Simulation studies showed that the new method performs well. This new method is applied to data on pediatric vaccines. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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