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Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality

BACKGROUND: Greater epidemiologic understanding of the relationships among fetal-infant mortality and its prognostic factors, including birthweight, could have vast public health implications. A key step toward that understanding is a realistic and tractable framework for analyzing birthweight distr...

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Autores principales: Charnigo, Richard, Chesnut, Lorie W, LoBianco, Tony, Kirby, Russell S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2936298/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20704722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-10-44
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author Charnigo, Richard
Chesnut, Lorie W
LoBianco, Tony
Kirby, Russell S
author_facet Charnigo, Richard
Chesnut, Lorie W
LoBianco, Tony
Kirby, Russell S
author_sort Charnigo, Richard
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Greater epidemiologic understanding of the relationships among fetal-infant mortality and its prognostic factors, including birthweight, could have vast public health implications. A key step toward that understanding is a realistic and tractable framework for analyzing birthweight distributions and fetal-infant mortality. The present paper is the second of a two-part series that introduces such a framework. METHODS: We propose estimating birthweight-specific mortality within each component of a normal mixture model representing a birthweight distribution, the number of components having been determined from the data rather than fixed a priori. RESULTS: We address a number of methodological issues related to our proposal, including the construction of confidence intervals for mortality risk at any given birthweight within a component, for odds ratios comparing mortality within two different components from the same population, and for odds ratios comparing mortality within analogous components from two different populations. As an illustration we find that, for a population of white singleton infants, the odds of mortality at 3000 g are an estimated 4.15 times as large in component 2 of a 4-component normal mixture model as in component 4 (95% confidence interval, 2.04 to 8.43). We also outline an extension of our framework through which covariates could be probabilistically related to mixture components. This extension might allow the assertion of approximate correspondences between mixture components and identifiable subpopulations. CONCLUSIONS: The framework developed in this paper does not require infants from compromised pregnancies to share a common birthweight-specific mortality curve, much less assume the existence of an interval of birthweights over which all infants have the same curve. Hence, the present framework can reveal heterogeneity in mortality that is undetectable via a contaminated normal model or a 2-component normal mixture model.
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spelling pubmed-29362982011-07-08 Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality Charnigo, Richard Chesnut, Lorie W LoBianco, Tony Kirby, Russell S BMC Pregnancy Childbirth Technical Advance BACKGROUND: Greater epidemiologic understanding of the relationships among fetal-infant mortality and its prognostic factors, including birthweight, could have vast public health implications. A key step toward that understanding is a realistic and tractable framework for analyzing birthweight distributions and fetal-infant mortality. The present paper is the second of a two-part series that introduces such a framework. METHODS: We propose estimating birthweight-specific mortality within each component of a normal mixture model representing a birthweight distribution, the number of components having been determined from the data rather than fixed a priori. RESULTS: We address a number of methodological issues related to our proposal, including the construction of confidence intervals for mortality risk at any given birthweight within a component, for odds ratios comparing mortality within two different components from the same population, and for odds ratios comparing mortality within analogous components from two different populations. As an illustration we find that, for a population of white singleton infants, the odds of mortality at 3000 g are an estimated 4.15 times as large in component 2 of a 4-component normal mixture model as in component 4 (95% confidence interval, 2.04 to 8.43). We also outline an extension of our framework through which covariates could be probabilistically related to mixture components. This extension might allow the assertion of approximate correspondences between mixture components and identifiable subpopulations. CONCLUSIONS: The framework developed in this paper does not require infants from compromised pregnancies to share a common birthweight-specific mortality curve, much less assume the existence of an interval of birthweights over which all infants have the same curve. Hence, the present framework can reveal heterogeneity in mortality that is undetectable via a contaminated normal model or a 2-component normal mixture model. BioMed Central 2010-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2936298/ /pubmed/20704722 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-10-44 Text en Copyright ©2010 Charnigo et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Technical Advance
Charnigo, Richard
Chesnut, Lorie W
LoBianco, Tony
Kirby, Russell S
Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality
title Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality
title_full Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality
title_fullStr Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality
title_full_unstemmed Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality
title_short Thinking outside the curve, part II: modeling fetal-infant mortality
title_sort thinking outside the curve, part ii: modeling fetal-infant mortality
topic Technical Advance
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2936298/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20704722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-10-44
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