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Design and Analysis of Clinical Study Odds ratio and relative risk Dr. Tuan V. Nguyen Garvan Institute of Medical Research Sydney, Australia
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SmokingFractureNo-fracture Yes5195 No15985 2 x 2 table RiskDiseaseNo disease Presencead Absencebc
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Overview Distinction of research studies Incidence and prevalence Odds ratio Relative risk
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Distinction of studies time PAST PRESENTFUTURE Cohort study, RCT (longitudinal, prospective) Case-control study Cross- sectional study
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Measure of disease frequency StudyEstimate Case-controlAssociation odds ratio Cross-sectionalPrevalence Prevalence ratio Prospective (longitudinal)Incidence Relative risk, Hazards ratio odds ratio RCTIncidence Hazards ratio, odds ratio
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Fracture (b) No fracture (d) Smoking (a) No smoking (c) Risk factorsOutcome Fracture (b) No fracture (d) Smoking (a) No smoking (c) Risk factorsOutcome Longitudinal study Case-control study Measure of association: Relative risk = a/(a+b) c/(c+d) Odds ratio = a*d b*c Longitudinal and case-control studies
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Measure of disease frequency Risk factorCasesControls Presenceab Absencecd TotalN1N2 Case-control study N1 and N2 are pre-determined (fixed) Risk factor at baseline DiseaseNo diseaseTotal PresenceabN1 AbsencecdN2 Prospective study N1 and N2 are fixed at baseline
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Risk factor CasesControls Presenceab Absencecd TotalN1N2 Odds ratio (OR) and relative risk (RR) Case-control study Risk factor at baseline DiseaseNo disease Total PresenceabN1 AbsencecdN2 Prospective study When a and c are very small
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OR and RR: an example BMDTotalFractureNo- fracture Incidence Low20051950.025 High1000159850.015 Prospective study
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OR and RR: an example BMDTotalFractureNo- fracture Incidence Low200201800.10 High1000509500.05 Prospective study
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Effect of the incidence on RR and OR
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Translating measures of association Incidence of fracture in women = 3% Incidence of fracture in men = 1.5% –“Incidence in women was 2 times that in men.” –“Incidence in women was 2 times as great as in men.” –“Incidence in women was 100% greater than incidence in men.” [(3.0 – 1.5) / 1.5 = 100%]
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Prognosis (prospective cohort study) Baseline: 1287 women recruited in 1989-1992 –Bone mineral density (osteoporosis, non-osteoporosis) Follow-up: 1989 2005 –Fracture TotalFractureNo- fracture Osteoporosis 345137208 Non-osteoporosis 942191751
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Prognosis (prospective cohort study) TotalFractureNo-fracture Osteoporosis345137208 Non-osteoporosis942191751
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Diagnostic study Gold standard : biopsy Test: mammography Result of biopsy: cancer, no cancer Result of mammography: +ve, -ve Mammography result Biopsy result CancerNo cancer +veac -vebd Sensitivity = a / (a+b) Specificity = d / (c+d) PPV = ?
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Diagnosis – cohort study RANDOMLY selected 1000 individuals Biopsy Mammography Mammography result Biopsy result CancerNo cancer +ve850 -ve2940 Total10990 Sensitivity = 8 / (8+2)= 0.80 Specificity = 940 / (940 + 50) = 0.95 PPV = 8/(8+50) = 0.14
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Diagnosis – validation study Select 100 women with cancer Select 100 women without breast cancer Perform mammography test on the 200 women Mammography result Biopsy result CancerNo cancer +ve9015 -ve1085 Total100 Sensitivity = 90 / 100 = 0.90 Specificity = 85 / 100 = 0.85 PPV = not estimable
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Type I and Type II errors
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TRUTHSTATISTICAL TESTNot significant Effect No effect Significant (p<0.05) Not significant (p>0.05) Significant (p<0.05) Not significant (p>0.05) OK (1- ) Type II error ( ) Type I error ( ) OK : significance level 1- : power Risks of Inference
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Clinical relevance and statistical significance
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Two studies: –Study 1: group 1 = group 2 = 15 subjects –Study 2: group 1 = group 2 = 1500 subjects nGroup 1 (mean±SD) Group 2 (mean±SD) Difference(95% CI)P value 15135 ± 8.5144 ± 12.09 (1.0 -12.0)0.09 1500139.4 ± 8.3140.2 ± 10.10.8 (0.3 -1.8)0.0235 Clinical relevance and statistical significance
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