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Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes

Restricting to live births can induce bias in studies of pregnancy and developmental outcomes, but whether this live-birth bias results in underestimating disparities is unknown. Bias may arise from collider stratification due to an unmeasured common cause of fetal loss and the outcome of interest,...

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Autores principales: Goin, Dana E., Casey, Joan A., Kioumourtzoglou, Marianthi-Anna, Cushing, Lara J., Morello-Frosch, Rachel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8043739/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33870007
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/EE9.0000000000000131
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author Goin, Dana E.
Casey, Joan A.
Kioumourtzoglou, Marianthi-Anna
Cushing, Lara J.
Morello-Frosch, Rachel
author_facet Goin, Dana E.
Casey, Joan A.
Kioumourtzoglou, Marianthi-Anna
Cushing, Lara J.
Morello-Frosch, Rachel
author_sort Goin, Dana E.
collection PubMed
description Restricting to live births can induce bias in studies of pregnancy and developmental outcomes, but whether this live-birth bias results in underestimating disparities is unknown. Bias may arise from collider stratification due to an unmeasured common cause of fetal loss and the outcome of interest, or depletion of susceptibles, where exposure differentially causes fetal loss among those with underlying susceptibility. METHODS: We conducted a simulation study to examine the magnitude of live-birth bias in a population parameterized to resemble one year of conceptions in California (N = 625,000). We simulated exposure to a non–time-varying environmental hazard, risk of spontaneous abortion, and time to live birth using 1000 Monte Carlo simulations. Our outcome of interest was preterm birth. We included a social vulnerability factor to represent social disadvantage, and estimated overall risk differences for exposure and preterm birth using linear probability models and stratified by the social vulnerability factor. We calculated how often confidence intervals included the true point estimate (CI coverage probabilities) to illustrate whether effect estimates differed qualitatively from the truth. RESULTS: Depletion of susceptibles resulted in a larger magnitude of bias compared with collider stratification, with larger bias among the socially vulnerable group. Coverage probabilities were not adversely affected by bias due to collider stratification. Depletion of susceptibles reduced coverage, especially among the socially vulnerable (coverage among socially vulnerable = 46%, coverage among nonsocially vulnerable = 91% in the most extreme scenario). CONCLUSIONS: In simulations, hazardous environmental exposures induced live-birth bias and the bias was larger for socially vulnerable women.
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spelling pubmed-80437392021-04-16 Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes Goin, Dana E. Casey, Joan A. Kioumourtzoglou, Marianthi-Anna Cushing, Lara J. Morello-Frosch, Rachel Environ Epidemiol Original Research Article Restricting to live births can induce bias in studies of pregnancy and developmental outcomes, but whether this live-birth bias results in underestimating disparities is unknown. Bias may arise from collider stratification due to an unmeasured common cause of fetal loss and the outcome of interest, or depletion of susceptibles, where exposure differentially causes fetal loss among those with underlying susceptibility. METHODS: We conducted a simulation study to examine the magnitude of live-birth bias in a population parameterized to resemble one year of conceptions in California (N = 625,000). We simulated exposure to a non–time-varying environmental hazard, risk of spontaneous abortion, and time to live birth using 1000 Monte Carlo simulations. Our outcome of interest was preterm birth. We included a social vulnerability factor to represent social disadvantage, and estimated overall risk differences for exposure and preterm birth using linear probability models and stratified by the social vulnerability factor. We calculated how often confidence intervals included the true point estimate (CI coverage probabilities) to illustrate whether effect estimates differed qualitatively from the truth. RESULTS: Depletion of susceptibles resulted in a larger magnitude of bias compared with collider stratification, with larger bias among the socially vulnerable group. Coverage probabilities were not adversely affected by bias due to collider stratification. Depletion of susceptibles reduced coverage, especially among the socially vulnerable (coverage among socially vulnerable = 46%, coverage among nonsocially vulnerable = 91% in the most extreme scenario). CONCLUSIONS: In simulations, hazardous environmental exposures induced live-birth bias and the bias was larger for socially vulnerable women. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2021-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8043739/ /pubmed/33870007 http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/EE9.0000000000000131 Text en Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The Environmental Epidemiology. All rights reserved. Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND)This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND) (CreativeCommonsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivativesLicense4.0(CCBY-NC-ND)) , where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal.
spellingShingle Original Research Article
Goin, Dana E.
Casey, Joan A.
Kioumourtzoglou, Marianthi-Anna
Cushing, Lara J.
Morello-Frosch, Rachel
Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes
title Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes
title_full Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes
title_fullStr Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes
title_short Environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: Implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes
title_sort environmental hazards, social inequality, and fetal loss: implications of live-birth bias for estimation of disparities in birth outcomes
topic Original Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8043739/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33870007
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/EE9.0000000000000131
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