7: Study Design II Flashcards

1
Q

Describe a cross-sectional study

A
  • Occurs at a single point in time.
  • Divide the study population into 2 groups (case and controls), and assess the 2 groups by exposed/ not exposed
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2
Q

What can you estimate with cross-sectional studies?

A

Prevalence/ risk of outcome & exposure

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3
Q

What are advantages and disadvantages of cross-sectional studies?

A

+ quick (for assessment of disease and method for establishing who is ill) and cheap
+ can be done serially for changes over time
+ may be planned before cohort study
+ good first step for hypotheses
- no temporal relationship
- casual relationships are difficult to determine
- potential for selection and recall bias
- not good for exposures/outcome (eg is X a rare outcome?)

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4
Q

Is screening a form of cross-sectional survey?

A

+ done at one point in time
+ can be repeated at intervals
+ determines who is ill
Yes

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5
Q

Why does lung cancer screening not currently exist?

A

Lung cancer as a whole doesn’t have a defined age range
It would be expensive to screen everyone
It may not be ethical to screen populations most at risk (eg SES)

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6
Q

Describe multi-stage sampling and why it is used

A
  • deinfed population of cases and controls clustered
  • clusters are randomly selected for sampling
  • randomization is used for avoiding bias
  • it is used as it is quicker and cheaper than sampling a whole population
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7
Q

What is an example of a successful serial cross-sectional study?

A
  • 2000-2013 sexual behaviours, HIV testing, and the proportion of men at risk of transmitting HIV in London
  • 2 cross-sectional samples in 2000 and 2013 showed a successful launch of HIV/sexual health campaign
  • reduction in unprotected intercourse
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8
Q

Are surveys a good method for cancer epidemiology?

A
  • cancer is relatively rare, so no
  • surveys are better for assessing risk factors (smoking, diet)
  • good for screening and heath care usage for cancer patients
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9
Q

How can you analyze survey data?

A
  • estimate hazard risk ratios (similar to cohort)
  • estimate odds & odds ratio ( similar to case-control)
  • must look for confounding factors eg age, smoking, etc
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10
Q

Describe census data in the UK

A
  • everyone s surveyed in England and wales
  • occurs every 10 years
  • questions include: no of people in household and relations, type of house & ownership, marital status, ethnicity, religion, education, employment, long term health conditions
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11
Q

What are some examples of studies using census data?

A
  • 1991-2011 patterns of mortality by occupation
  • associations between commute mode and cardiovascular disease, cancer, and mortality across 25 years
  • fall in smoking prevalnce across UK from 2011
  • adult BMI status by sex 2018
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12
Q

What are some examples of courses of data for routinely collected data studies?

A
  • cancer registry
  • death certificate
  • hospitals admission data
  • general practise records
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13
Q

T or F
- GDPR regulations state anyone’s clinical care data can be used in studies
- Death certificate data can be used in data collection studies

A
  • F: anyone can opt-out
  • T
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14
Q

Why might some data not be eligible for use in routinely collected data studies?

A
  • data may be lost to follow up
  • the test may have been wrong or disputed
  • they may have died before diagnosis (zero survival)
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15
Q

Describe the trend in the routinely collected data study on mesothelioma mortality in Britain

A
  • in 2020 there was high levels of mesothelioma deaths despite intervention
  • late affect due to asbestos regulations in place, a drop after 2020 is now showing in statistics
  • late onset of mesothelioma after exposure to asbestos
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16
Q

Describe the usage of GP data in the UK in studies

A
  • all data is anonymized
  • datasets include CPRD, THIN, Qresearch, System 1
  • combining datasets improves coverage
  • ate its can opt-out due to GDPR regulations
17
Q

What is an ecological study?

A
  • an observational study (does not introduce exposure)
  • unit of analysis is populations (not individuals)
  • they are most commonly cohort or cross-sectional surveys
18
Q

Give an example of a successful ecological study

A

Olive oil, diet, colorectal cancer ecological study from 2000.
Storing positive correlation between meat consumption across countries and CRC rates per 100,000

19
Q

What are the + and - of ecological studies?

A

+ quick and cheap, data acquired from routine sources
+ good for early idea testing
+ some exposures are measured well at community level eg pollution, diet, stress
- ecological fallacy
- results cannot be directly applied to individuals
- adjust for confounding

20
Q

How are ecological studies analyzed/measured?

A
  • degree of association: correlation coefficient
  • +1 positive, 0 no correlation, -1 negative
21
Q

Describe the idea of ecological fallacy with an example

A

Relationships from ecological studies disappear when analysed at individual levels.
Eg: higher levels of fat consumption in the population are correlated with hate rates of BC. It would be incorrect to assume that a woman who eats more fat in her diet is at a higher risk of BC.