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Statistical Inference for more than two groups
Statistics for Health Research Statistical Inference for more than two groups Peter T. Donnan Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
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Tests to be covered Chi-squared test One-way ANOVA Logrank test
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Significance testing – general overview
Define the null and alternative hypotheses under the study Acquire data Calculate the value of the test statistic Compare the value of the test statistic to values from a known probability distribution Interpret the p-value and draw conclusion
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Categorical data > 2 groups
Unordered categories – Nominal - Chi-squared test for association Ordered categories - Ordinal - Chi squared test for trend
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Example Does the proportion of mothers developing
pre-eclampsia vary by parity (birth order)?
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Contingency table (r x c) Pre-eclampsia Birth Order 1st 2nd 3rd 4th No
Yes 1170 (79.4%) 278 (84.8%) 83 (86.5%) 86 (92.4%) 304 (20.6%) 50 (15.2%) 13 (13.5%) 7 (7.5%)
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Null Hypotheses Null hypothesis: No association between pre-eclampsia and birth order Null hypothesis: There is no trend in pre-eclampsia with parity
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Test of association Test of linear trend
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Conclusions Strong association between pre-eclampsia and birth order (Χ2 = 15.42, p = 0.001) Significant linear trend in incidence of pre-eclampsia with parity (Χ2 = 15.03, p < 0.001) Note 3 degrees of freedom for association test and 1 df for test for trend
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Contingency table (r x c) Pre-eclampsia Birth Order 1st 2nd 3rd 4th No
Yes 1170 (79.4%) 278 (84.8%) 83 (86.5%) 86 (92.4%) 304 (20.6%) 50 (15.2%) 13 (13.5%) 7 (7.5%)
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Contingency Tables (r x c)
Tables can be any size. For example SIMD deciles by parity would be a 10 x 4 table But with very large tables difficult to interpret tests of association Crosstabulations in SPSS can give Odds ratios as an option with row or column with two categories
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Numerical data > 2 groups
Compare means from several groups Single global test of difference in means Also test for linear trend 1-way analysis of variance (ANOVA)
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Extend t-test to >2 groups i.e Analysis of Variance (ANOVA)
Consider scores for contribution to energy intake from fat groups, milk groups and alcohol groups Does the mean score differ across the three categories of intake groups? Koh ET, Owen WL. Introduction to Nutrition and Health Research Kluwer Boston, 2000
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One-Way ANOVA of scores
Contributor to Energy Intake Fat Milk Alcohol n=6 Mean=4.22 n=6 Mean=2.01 n=6 Mean=0.167
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One-Way ANOVA of Scores
The null hypothesis (H0) is ‘there are no differences in mean score across the three groups’ Use SPSS One-Way ANOVA to carry out this test
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Assumptions of 1-Way ANOVA
1. Standard deviations are similar 2. Test variable (scores) are approx. Normally distributed If assumptions are not met, use non-parametric equivalent Kruskal-Wallis test
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Results of ANOVA ANOVA partitions variation into Within and Between group components Results in F-statistic – compared with values in F-tables F = 108.6, with 2 and 15 df, p<0.001
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Results of ANOVA The groups differ significantly and it is clear the Fat group contributes most to energy score with a mean = 4.22 Further pair-wise comparisons can be made (3 possible) using multiple comparisons test e.g. Bonferroni
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Example 2 Does income vary by highest level of education achieved?
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Null Hypothesis and alternative
H0: no difference in mean income by education level achieved H1: mean income varies with education level achieved
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Assumptions of 1-Way ANOVA
Standard deviations or variances are similar Test variable (income) are approx. Normally distributed If assumptions are not met, use non-parametric equivalent Kruskal-Wallis test
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Table of Mean income for each level of educational achievement
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Analysis of Variance Table
F-test gives P < showing significant difference between mean levels of education
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Table of each pairwise comparison.
Note lower income for ‘did not complete school’ to all other groups. All p-values adjusted for multiple comparisons
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Summary of ANOVA ANOVA useful if number of groups with continuous summary in each SPSS does all pairwise group comparisons adjusted for multiple testing Note that ANOVA is just a form of linear regression – see later
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Extending Kaplan-Meier and logrank test in SPSS
You need to specify: Survival time – time from surgery (tfsurg) Status – Dead = 1, censored = 0 (dead) Factor – Duke’s stage at baseline (A, B, C, D, Unknown) Select compare factor and logrank Optionally select plot of survival
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Implementing Logrank test in SPSS
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Select options to obtain plot and median survival
Select Compare Factor to obtain logrank test Select options to obtain plot and median survival Select linear trend for this test
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Overall Comparisons Chi-Square df Sig. Log Rank (Mantel-Cox) The vector of trend weights is -2, -1, 0, 1, 2. This is the default. The test for trend in survival across Duke’s stage is highly significant
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Interpret SPSS output Note the logrank statistic, degrees of freedom and statistical significance (p-value). Note in which direction survival is worst or best and back up visual information from the Kaplan-Meier plot with median survival and 95% confidence intervals from the output. Finally, interpret the results!
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Interpret test result in relation to median survival
Duke’s Stage Median Survival (days) Mean Survival (Days) A 2770 1978 B 1749 1866 C 1120 1304 D 375 646 Unknown 581 1297
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Output form Kaplan-Meier in SPSS
Note that SPSS gives three possible tests: Logrank, Tarone-Ware and Breslow In general, logrank gives greater weight to later events compared to the other two tests. If all are similar quote logrank test. If different results, quote more than one test result
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Editing SPSS output Note that everything in the SPSS output window can be copied and pasted into Word and Powerpoint. Double-clicking on plots also allows editing of the plot such as changing axes, colours, fonts, etc.
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Diabetic patients LDL data
Try carrying out extended Crosstabulations and ANOVA where appropriate in the LDL data… E.g. APOE genotype
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Colorectal cancer patients: survival following surgery
Try carrying out Kaplan-Meier plots and logrank tests for other factors such as WHO Functional Performance, smoking, etc…
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Extending test to more than 2 groups Summary
Define H0 and H1 Choosing the appropriate test according to type of variables Interpret output carefully
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