Mortality and cancer incidence in the EPIC-NL cohort: impact of the healthy volunteer effect

Publication date

2015-02

Authors

Struijk, Ellen A
May, Anne MORCID 0000-0003-0643-3790
Beulens, JolineISNI 0000000393357801
van Gils, Carla H.ORCID 0000-0003-0817-7567
Monninkhof, Evelyn M.ORCID 0000-0002-6641-7605ISNI 0000000387581778
van der Schouw, Yvonne TORCID 0000-0002-4605-435XISNI 0000000140542144
Verschuren, W. M.MoniqueISNI 0000000140365125
Boer, Jolanda M. A.
Bueno-De-Mesquita, H. BasISNI 000000038768163X
Peeters, Petra H.ISNI 0000000389961598

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Supervisors

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Article

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taverne

Abstract

Background: Prospective cohort studies recruit relatively healthy population samples, resulting in lower morbidity and mortality rates than in the source population. This is known as the healthy volunteer effect. The aim of this study was to define the magnitude and the development over time of the healthy volunteer effect in the EPIC-NL cohort. Methods: We studied mortality rates in the EPIC-NL cohort, which comprises 37 551 men and women aged 20-70 years at recruitment in 1993-97. The date and cause of death of deceased participants until 2010 were obtained through linkage with the municipal registry and Statistics Netherlands. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) were computed by dividing the observed number of deaths by the number of deaths expected from the general Dutch population. Additionally, standardized incidence ratios were calculated to compare cancer incidence. Results: After an average follow-up of 14.9 years, 3029 deaths were documented. Overall mortality in men [SMR 73.5%, 95% confidence interval (CI): 68.1-79.3] and women (SMR 65.9%, 95% CI: 63.2-68.6) was lower compared with the general population for the whole follow-up period. The SMRs clearly increased over the follow-up period. Among women, the SMR was lower for death due to cardiovascular diseases than death due to cancer. Cancer incidence was also lower in EPIC-NL than in the general population (SMR 78.3 and 82.7% for men and women, respectively). Conclusion: The results show a healthy volunteer effect in the EPIC-NL cohort, which tapers off with longer follow-up. Therefore, in the first years of follow-up, power might not be sufficient to detect small associations.

Keywords

BRITISH VEGETARIANS, POPULATION, PROSTATE, TRIALS, OXFORD, BIAS, Taverne

Citation

Struijk, E A, May, A M, Beulens, J W J, van Gils, C H, Monninkhof, E M, van der Schouw, Y T, Verschuren, M W M, Boer, J M A, Bueno-de-Mesquita, B H & Peeters, P H M 2015, 'Mortality and cancer incidence in the EPIC-NL cohort : impact of the healthy volunteer effect', European Journal of Public Health, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 144-149. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/cku045