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Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices

Basic aspects in the handling of fatty acid-data have remained largely underexposed. Of these, we aimed to address three statistical methodological issues, by quantitatively exemplifying their imminent confounding impact on analytical outcomes: (1) presenting results as relative percentages or absol...

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Autores principales: Mocking, Roel J. T., Assies, Johanna, Lok, Anja, Ruhé, Henricus G., Koeter, Maarten W. J., Visser, Ieke, Bockting, Claudi L. H., Schene, Aart H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer-Verlag 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3334488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22446846
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11745-012-3665-2
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author Mocking, Roel J. T.
Assies, Johanna
Lok, Anja
Ruhé, Henricus G.
Koeter, Maarten W. J.
Visser, Ieke
Bockting, Claudi L. H.
Schene, Aart H.
author_facet Mocking, Roel J. T.
Assies, Johanna
Lok, Anja
Ruhé, Henricus G.
Koeter, Maarten W. J.
Visser, Ieke
Bockting, Claudi L. H.
Schene, Aart H.
author_sort Mocking, Roel J. T.
collection PubMed
description Basic aspects in the handling of fatty acid-data have remained largely underexposed. Of these, we aimed to address three statistical methodological issues, by quantitatively exemplifying their imminent confounding impact on analytical outcomes: (1) presenting results as relative percentages or absolute concentrations, (2) handling of missing/non-detectable values, and (3) using structural indices for data-reduction. Therefore, we reanalyzed an example dataset containing erythrocyte fatty acid-concentrations of 137 recurrently depressed patients and 73 controls. First, correlations between data presented as percentages and concentrations varied for different fatty acids, depending on their correlation with the total fatty acid-concentration. Second, multiple imputation of non-detects resulted in differences in significance compared to zero-substitution or omission of non-detects. Third, patients’ chain length-, unsaturation-, and peroxidation-indices were significantly lower compared to controls, which corresponded with patterns interpreted from individual fatty acid tests. In conclusion, results from our example dataset show that statistical methodological choices can have a significant influence on outcomes of fatty acid analysis, which emphasizes the relevance of: (1) hypothesis-based fatty acid-presentation (percentages or concentrations), (2) multiple imputation, preventing bias introduced by non-detects; and (3) the possibility of using (structural) indices, to delineate fatty acid-patterns thereby preventing multiple testing.
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spelling pubmed-33344882012-05-14 Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices Mocking, Roel J. T. Assies, Johanna Lok, Anja Ruhé, Henricus G. Koeter, Maarten W. J. Visser, Ieke Bockting, Claudi L. H. Schene, Aart H. Lipids Methods Basic aspects in the handling of fatty acid-data have remained largely underexposed. Of these, we aimed to address three statistical methodological issues, by quantitatively exemplifying their imminent confounding impact on analytical outcomes: (1) presenting results as relative percentages or absolute concentrations, (2) handling of missing/non-detectable values, and (3) using structural indices for data-reduction. Therefore, we reanalyzed an example dataset containing erythrocyte fatty acid-concentrations of 137 recurrently depressed patients and 73 controls. First, correlations between data presented as percentages and concentrations varied for different fatty acids, depending on their correlation with the total fatty acid-concentration. Second, multiple imputation of non-detects resulted in differences in significance compared to zero-substitution or omission of non-detects. Third, patients’ chain length-, unsaturation-, and peroxidation-indices were significantly lower compared to controls, which corresponded with patterns interpreted from individual fatty acid tests. In conclusion, results from our example dataset show that statistical methodological choices can have a significant influence on outcomes of fatty acid analysis, which emphasizes the relevance of: (1) hypothesis-based fatty acid-presentation (percentages or concentrations), (2) multiple imputation, preventing bias introduced by non-detects; and (3) the possibility of using (structural) indices, to delineate fatty acid-patterns thereby preventing multiple testing. Springer-Verlag 2012-03-25 2012 /pmc/articles/PMC3334488/ /pubmed/22446846 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11745-012-3665-2 Text en © The Author(s) 2012 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
spellingShingle Methods
Mocking, Roel J. T.
Assies, Johanna
Lok, Anja
Ruhé, Henricus G.
Koeter, Maarten W. J.
Visser, Ieke
Bockting, Claudi L. H.
Schene, Aart H.
Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices
title Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices
title_full Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices
title_fullStr Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices
title_full_unstemmed Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices
title_short Statistical Methodological Issues in Handling of Fatty Acid Data: Percentage or Concentration, Imputation and Indices
title_sort statistical methodological issues in handling of fatty acid data: percentage or concentration, imputation and indices
topic Methods
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3334488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22446846
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11745-012-3665-2
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