Misclassification Bias
Misclassification Bias
Kochs Postulates for Infectious Disease Hills Postulates for Chronic Disease and Complex Questions
Specificity
Consistency with Other Associations Time Sequence Dose-Response Relationship Analogy Experiment Coherence
Epidemiology (Schneider)
We need to assess:
Epidemiology (Schneider)
BIAS
Systematic error built into the study design Selection Bias
Information Bias
Berksonian bias
There may be a
spurious association between diseases or between a characteristic and a disease because of the different probabilities of admission to a hospital for those with the disease, without the disease and with the characteristic of interest
Berkson J. Limitations of the application of fourfold table analysis to hospital data. Biometrics 1946;2:47-53
Epidemiology (Schneider)
Epidemiology (Schneider)
Epidemiology (Schneider)
Epidemiology (Schneider)
Epidemiology (Schneider)
Epidemiology (Schneider)
Example: Measurement bias instrumentation may be inaccurate, such as using only one size blood pressure cuff to take measurements on both adults and children
Epidemiology (Schneider)
Controls
50 50 100
Total
150 100 250
Total
160 90 250
Exposed Nonexposed
110 40 150
Controls
50 50 100
Total
150 100 250
Controls
50
50 100
Total
140
110 250
90
60 150
OR = ad/bc = 2.0; RR = a/(a+b)/c/(c+d) = 1.3 Differential misclassification - Underestimate exposure for 10 controls, inflate rates
Cases Exposed Nonexposed 100 50 150 Controls 40 60 100 Total 140 110 250
OR = ad/bc = 2.0; RR = a/(a+b)/c/(c+d) = 1.3 Differential misclassification - Overestimate exposure for 10 controls, deflate rates
Cases Controls Total
Exposed
Nonexposed
100
50 150
60
40 100
160
90 250
This will dilute the study findings BIAS TOWARD THE NULL
Epidemiology (Schneider)
OR = ad/bc = 2.0; RR = a/(a+b)/c/(c+d) = 1.3 Nondifferential misclassification - Overestimate exposure in 10 cases, 10 controls bias towards null
Cases Exposed Nonexposed 110 40 150 Controls 60 40 100 Total 170 80 250
Define, a priori, who is a case or what constitutes exposure so that there is no overlap
Define categories within groups clearly (age groups, aggregates of person years)
Train observers or interviewers to obtain data in the same fashion It is preferable to use more than one observer or interviewer, but not so many that they cannot be trained in an identical manner
Single masked study subjects are unaware of whether they are in the experimental or control group Double masked study the subject and the observer are unaware of the subjects group allocation Triple masked study the subject, observer and data analyst are unaware of the subjects group allocation