Performance of prior event rate ratio adjustment method in pharmacoepidemiology: a simulation study

Publication date

2015-05-01

Authors

Uddin, J.ISNI 0000000507450319
Groenwold, Rolf H. H.ISNI 0000000394374611
van Staa, T.P.ISNI 0000000076619150
de Boer, AnthoniusISNI 0000000389596105
Belitser, Svetlana V
Hoes, Arno W
Roes, Kit C B
Klungel, Olaf H.ISNI 0000000390199414

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

PURPOSE: Prior event rate ratio (PERR) adjustment method has been proposed to control for unmeasured confounding. We aimed to assess the performance of the PERR method in realistic pharmacoepidemiological settings. METHODS: Simulation studies were performed with varying effects of prior events on the probability of subsequent exposure and post-events, incidence rates, effects of confounders, and rate of mortality/dropout. Exposure effects were estimated using conventional rate ratio (RR) and PERR adjustment method (i.e. ratio of RR post-exposure initiation and RR prior to initiation of exposure). RESULTS: In the presence of unmeasured confounding, both conventional and the PERR method may yield biased estimates, but PERR estimates appear generally less biased estimates than the conventional method. However, when prior events strongly influence the probability of subsequent exposure, the exposure effect from the PERR method was more biased than the conventional method. For instance, when the effect of prior events on the exposure was RR = 1.60, the effect estimate from the PERR method was RR = 1.13 and from the conventional method was RR = 2.48 (true exposure effect, RR = 2). In all settings, the variation of the estimates was larger for the PERR method than for the conventional method. CONCLUSION: The PERR adjustment method can be applied to reduce bias as a result of unmeasured confounding. However, only in particular situations, it can completely remove the bias as a result of unmeasured confounding. When applying this method, theoretical justification using available clinical knowledge for assumptions of the PERR method should be provided. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Keywords

Bias, Epidemiology, Pharmacoepidemiology, Post-event, Prior event, Rate ratio, Simulation, Unmeasured confounding, Taverne, Pharmacology (medical), Epidemiology

Citation

Uddin, M J, Groenwold, R H H, van Staa, T P, de Boer, A, Belitser, S V, Hoes, A W, Roes, K C B & Klungel, O H 2015, 'Performance of prior event rate ratio adjustment method in pharmacoepidemiology : a simulation study', Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety, vol. 24, no. 5, pp. 468-477. https://doi.org/10.1002/pds.3724