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Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results

Adequate control of comorbidity has long been recognized as a critical challenge in clinical epidemiology. Comorbidity scales reduce information about coexistent disease to a single index that is easy to comprehend and statistically efficient. These are the main advantages of an index over incorpora...

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Autor principal: Lash, Timothy L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2943159/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20865081
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author Lash, Timothy L
author_facet Lash, Timothy L
author_sort Lash, Timothy L
collection PubMed
description Adequate control of comorbidity has long been recognized as a critical challenge in clinical epidemiology. Comorbidity scales reduce information about coexistent disease to a single index that is easy to comprehend and statistically efficient. These are the main advantages of an index over incorporating each disease into an analysis as an individual variable. Many study populations have a low prevalence of subjects with high comorbidity scores, so it is common to combine subjects with some score above a threshold into a single open-ended category. This paper examines the impact of collapsing comorbidity scores into these categories. It shows analytically and by synthetic example that collapsing the high-end categories of a comorbidity scale changes the pattern of effect of comorbidity. Furthermore, collapsing the high-end categories biases analyses that control for comorbidity as a confounder or analyze modification of an exposure’s effect by comorbidity. Each of these results specific to comorbidity scoring derives from more general epidemiologic principles. The appeal of collapsing categories to facilitate interpretation and statistical analysis may be offset by misleading results. Analysts should assure the uniformity of outcome risk in collapsed categories, informed by judgment and possibly statistical testing, or use analytic methods, such as restriction or spline regression, which can achieve similar goals without sacrificing the validity of results.
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spelling pubmed-29431592010-09-23 Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results Lash, Timothy L Clin Epidemiol Original Research Adequate control of comorbidity has long been recognized as a critical challenge in clinical epidemiology. Comorbidity scales reduce information about coexistent disease to a single index that is easy to comprehend and statistically efficient. These are the main advantages of an index over incorporating each disease into an analysis as an individual variable. Many study populations have a low prevalence of subjects with high comorbidity scores, so it is common to combine subjects with some score above a threshold into a single open-ended category. This paper examines the impact of collapsing comorbidity scores into these categories. It shows analytically and by synthetic example that collapsing the high-end categories of a comorbidity scale changes the pattern of effect of comorbidity. Furthermore, collapsing the high-end categories biases analyses that control for comorbidity as a confounder or analyze modification of an exposure’s effect by comorbidity. Each of these results specific to comorbidity scoring derives from more general epidemiologic principles. The appeal of collapsing categories to facilitate interpretation and statistical analysis may be offset by misleading results. Analysts should assure the uniformity of outcome risk in collapsed categories, informed by judgment and possibly statistical testing, or use analytic methods, such as restriction or spline regression, which can achieve similar goals without sacrificing the validity of results. Dove Medical Press 2009-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2943159/ /pubmed/20865081 Text en © 2009 Lash, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Lash, Timothy L
Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results
title Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results
title_full Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results
title_fullStr Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results
title_full_unstemmed Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results
title_short Collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results
title_sort collapsing high-end categories of comorbidity may yield misleading results
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2943159/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20865081
work_keys_str_mv AT lashtimothyl collapsinghighendcategoriesofcomorbiditymayyieldmisleadingresults