Epidemiological Study Designs
Epidemiological Study Designs
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Objectives – Concepts
1. Understand the concept of probability and odds
3. Define, calculate and interpret “risk estimates and their uses RR,
RRR, ARR, OR, PAR, PARF
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Fundamental Assumption in Epidemiology
Disease doesn’t occur in a vacuum
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Components of Epidemiology
Measure disease frequency
Quantify disease
Descriptive epidemiology:
Analytic epidemiology:
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Types of Studies
A. Experimental – study factor is manipulated by the investigator
Descriptive epidemiology:
Analytic epidemiology:
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Epidemiologic study designs
Factors Important in Study Design
B. Biases
1. Internal validity
Or Indicates whether the independent variable was the sole cause of the
change in the dependent variable
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2. External validity
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Basic Question in Analytic Epidemiology-
Are exposure and disease linked?
Exposure Disease
Basic Questions in Analytic Epidemiology
Look to link exposure and disease
What is the exposure?
Who are the exposed?
What are the potential health effects?
What approach will you take to study the relationship between
exposure and effect?
Descriptive Analytic
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Timeframe of Studies
Prospective Study - looks forward, looks to the future,
examines future events, follows a condition, concern or
disease into the future
time
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Timeframe of Studies
Retrospective Study - “to look back”, looks back in time to
study events that have already occurred
time
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Descriptive Studies
1. Case Reports
Detailed presentation of a single case or handful of cases
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2. Case Series
Experience of a group of patients with a similar diagnosis
Informative for very rare disease with few established risk factors
Disadvantages
The two main design issues which need to be considered in designing a survey
are the sampling protocol to be used and the design of the data-collection
instrument
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Analytic Epidemiology
1. Observational Studies
Cross-sectional
Cohort
Case-control
Non-experimental
Ecological studies are relatively quick and inexpensive to perform and can
provide clues to possible associations between exposures and outcomes of
interest.
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1. Cross-sectional studies
An “observational” design that surveys exposures and disease status
at a single point in time (a cross-section of the population)
time
Study only exists at this point in time
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Cross-sectional Design
factor present
No Disease
factor absent
Study
population
factor present
Disease
factor absent
time
Study only exists at this point in time
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Cross-sectional Studies
Often used to study conditions that are relatively frequent with long duration of
expression (nonfatal, chronic conditions)
Not suitable for studying rare or highly fatal diseases or a disease with short duration
of expression
Disadvantages
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factor present
Cases
factor absent (disease)
Study
population
factor present Controls
(no disease)
factor absent
present
past
time
Limitations
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Selection of a case
Both exclusion and inclusion criteria can be used for this purpose, and should
apply to both cases and potential controls
There are three approaches that might be used to ensure that cases and controls are
similar:
Matching
Analytic control
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Restricted sampling: If breed is a likely confounder you might only
select one breed in the study (the dominant breed in the source
population).
Matching: Each case is matched with a control that has identical (or at
least similar) values of the confounding variable (e.g. age and sex).
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Disadvantages:
2. you cannot quantify the effect of the matching variable on the risk
of disease
3. analysis of the data must take into account the effect of matching;
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Selection of the controls
One of the most difficult aspects of a case-control design
It should be considered that controls are subjects that would have been cases if
the outcome had occurred
Controls should come from the same study base (population) as the cases
In open populations controls should mirror the exposure time of the non-case
subgroup in the population.
The time during which a non-case is eligible for selection as a control is the time
period in which it is also eligible to become a case if the disease should occur.
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In most cases the case-control studies in veterinary medicine has
been a risk-based (cumulative incidence) design
In this approach, the controls are selected from among those animals
that did not become cases up to the end of the risk period
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Example of case-control study
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3. Cohort Studies
an “observational” design comparing individuals with a
time
Study begins here 31
Cohort Study
Strengths
Limitations
Loss to follow-up
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Experimental Studies
Treatment and exposures occur in a “controlled” environment
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The Possible Clinical Trial Designs
• Blinded: Participants do not know if in experimental or control
group.
time
Study begins here (baseline point) 35
Randomized Controlled Trials
Disadvantages
Very expensive
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Study Design Sequence
Hypothesis formation
Descriptive
Case reports Case series
epidemiology
Risk is the probability that an event will happen with its consequence.
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Measures of association
Both exposure and outcome are binary variables (yes or no), the
results can be presented in a 2 × 2 table.
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Measure of association
1. Cross-sectional study
Individuals are tested for the presence of disease and risk factor at
same time.
And the prevalence is the measure of disease.
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Example
If a cross-section study is performed on a random sample of 300
animals the frequencies would look like the following
Exposed 60 40 100
Non-exposed 40 160 200
Total 100 200 300
=3
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Case-control study
• Diseased (a+c) and non diseased (b+d) are intentionally chosen.
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Cont…
Odds of disease in the exposed population:
Case Control
Exposed 90 30
Non-exposed 60 120 Exposure is 6 times more common in
cases than in control
Total 150 150
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Cohort study
Two groups followed over time:
One exposed
The other non exposed
Follows in chronological order (the effect of exposure on disease
occurrence)
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Cont.
Exposed 90 60 150
Non- 30 120 150
exposed
300
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Another example
In vaccine trials (in foxes), vaccine efficacy is defined as the
proportion of disease prevented by the vaccine in vaccinated
individuals which is the attributable fraction.
The following results were obtained:
Rabies + Rabies - Total
Vaccination - 18 30 48
Vaccination + 12 46 58
Total 30 76 106
The odds of rabies in the unvaccinated group was 2.3 times the odds of
rabies in the vaccinated group (OR = 2.3).
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If RR = 1 : risk of disease in the exposed and non-exposed groups are
equal.
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Incidence rate ratio (IRR)
No of cases 50 25 75
Time at risk 500 400 900
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Measures of effect in the exposed population
• The measure of effect indicates to what extent the event is
prevented if the risk factor is avoided.
• The measures are:
– Attributable risk (rate)
– Attributable fraction
Or
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To make AF more clear
(CIR-1)/CIR~(2.5-1)/2.5=0.6
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Vaccine example
• In vaccine trials (in foxes), vaccine efficacy is defined as the proportion of disease
prevented by the vaccine in vaccinated individuals which is the attributable fraction.
The following results were obtained:
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Measures of effect in the total population
• Population attributable risk or rate (PAR) is the increase or decrease
in risk (or rate) of disease in the population that is attributable to
exposed.
• The incidence in the population minus incidence in the unexposed
group.
• To calculate this factor, the population incidence should be known
Exposed 15 45 60
This means the incidence of disease
Non-exposed 8 72 80 in the population associated with
23 117 140 the factor is 0.064
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Measures of effect in the total population
• Population attributable fraction (PAF) is the proportion
of disease in the population that is due to the exposure.
Exposed 15 45 60
Non-exposed 8 72 80
39% percent of cases in the
23 117 140 population was due to exposure
(PAF = 0.39).
It will be also easily calculate as number of excess cases divided to the total number
of cases; 9/23=0.39 or (the AF times proportion of cases that is exposed 0.6*15/23
=0.39) 55
Epidemiologic measures of association for independent proportions in 2 × 2
tables.
Parameter Case-control Cohort Cross-sectional
Measures of strength:
RR No yes yes (prevalence RR)
IRR no yes no
OR yes yes yes (prevalence OR)
Measures of effect:
AR No yes yes
AF No yes yes