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Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion

BACKGROUND: Conversion of sputum culture from positive to negative for M. tuberculosis is a key indicator of treatment response. An initial positive culture is a pre-requisite to observe conversion. Consequently, patients with a missing or negative initial culture are excluded from analyses of conve...

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Autores principales: Rodriguez, Carly A., Lodi, Sara, Horsburgh, C. Robert, Bastard, Mathieu, Hewison, Cathy, Huerga, Helena, Khan, Munira, Khan, Palwasha Y., Khan, Uzma, Oyewusi, Lawrence, Padayachee, Shrivani, Mitnick, Carole D., Franke, Molly F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9648724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36355658
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0276457
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author Rodriguez, Carly A.
Lodi, Sara
Horsburgh, C. Robert
Bastard, Mathieu
Hewison, Cathy
Huerga, Helena
Khan, Munira
Khan, Palwasha Y.
Khan, Uzma
Oyewusi, Lawrence
Padayachee, Shrivani
Mitnick, Carole D.
Franke, Molly F.
author_facet Rodriguez, Carly A.
Lodi, Sara
Horsburgh, C. Robert
Bastard, Mathieu
Hewison, Cathy
Huerga, Helena
Khan, Munira
Khan, Palwasha Y.
Khan, Uzma
Oyewusi, Lawrence
Padayachee, Shrivani
Mitnick, Carole D.
Franke, Molly F.
author_sort Rodriguez, Carly A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Conversion of sputum culture from positive to negative for M. tuberculosis is a key indicator of treatment response. An initial positive culture is a pre-requisite to observe conversion. Consequently, patients with a missing or negative initial culture are excluded from analyses of conversion outcomes. To identify the initial, or “baseline” culture, researchers must define a sample collection interval. An interval extending past treatment initiation can increase sample size but may introduce selection bias because patients without a positive pre-treatment culture must survive and remain in care to have a culture in the post-treatment interval. METHODS: We used simulated data and data from the endTB observational cohort to investigate the potential for bias when extending baseline culture intervals past treatment initiation. We evaluated bias in the proportion with six-month conversion. RESULTS: In simulation studies, the potential for bias depended on the proportion of patients missing a pre-treatment culture, proportion with conversion, proportion culture positive at treatment initiation, and proportion of patients missing a pre-treatment culture who would have been observed to be culture positive, had they had a culture. In observational data, the maximum potential for bias when reporting the proportion with conversion reached five percentage points in some sites. CONCLUSION: Extending the allowable baseline interval past treatment initiation may introduce selection bias. If investigators choose to extend the baseline collection interval past treatment initiation, the proportion missing a pre-treatment culture and the number of deaths and losses to follow up during the post-treatment allowable interval should be clearly enumerated.
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spelling pubmed-96487242022-11-15 Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion Rodriguez, Carly A. Lodi, Sara Horsburgh, C. Robert Bastard, Mathieu Hewison, Cathy Huerga, Helena Khan, Munira Khan, Palwasha Y. Khan, Uzma Oyewusi, Lawrence Padayachee, Shrivani Mitnick, Carole D. Franke, Molly F. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Conversion of sputum culture from positive to negative for M. tuberculosis is a key indicator of treatment response. An initial positive culture is a pre-requisite to observe conversion. Consequently, patients with a missing or negative initial culture are excluded from analyses of conversion outcomes. To identify the initial, or “baseline” culture, researchers must define a sample collection interval. An interval extending past treatment initiation can increase sample size but may introduce selection bias because patients without a positive pre-treatment culture must survive and remain in care to have a culture in the post-treatment interval. METHODS: We used simulated data and data from the endTB observational cohort to investigate the potential for bias when extending baseline culture intervals past treatment initiation. We evaluated bias in the proportion with six-month conversion. RESULTS: In simulation studies, the potential for bias depended on the proportion of patients missing a pre-treatment culture, proportion with conversion, proportion culture positive at treatment initiation, and proportion of patients missing a pre-treatment culture who would have been observed to be culture positive, had they had a culture. In observational data, the maximum potential for bias when reporting the proportion with conversion reached five percentage points in some sites. CONCLUSION: Extending the allowable baseline interval past treatment initiation may introduce selection bias. If investigators choose to extend the baseline collection interval past treatment initiation, the proportion missing a pre-treatment culture and the number of deaths and losses to follow up during the post-treatment allowable interval should be clearly enumerated. Public Library of Science 2022-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9648724/ /pubmed/36355658 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0276457 Text en © 2022 Rodriguez et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rodriguez, Carly A.
Lodi, Sara
Horsburgh, C. Robert
Bastard, Mathieu
Hewison, Cathy
Huerga, Helena
Khan, Munira
Khan, Palwasha Y.
Khan, Uzma
Oyewusi, Lawrence
Padayachee, Shrivani
Mitnick, Carole D.
Franke, Molly F.
Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion
title Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion
title_full Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion
title_fullStr Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion
title_full_unstemmed Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion
title_short Selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion
title_sort selection bias in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cohort studies assessing sputum culture conversion
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9648724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36355658
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0276457
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