Observational Studies in CVD Flashcards

1
Q

What is a cross sectional study?

A

A study of a sample population at one point in time that provides a descriptive output, particularly prevalence. It is cheap and easy but only provides weak evidence for causality.

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2
Q

What is a case control study?

A

An analytical study that compares previous exposure between cases and controls. Controls are matched with cases. Retrospective - point of recruitment is after outcome of interest.

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3
Q

What is the main advantage of case control studies?

A

Can study rare diseases

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4
Q

What is the output of a case control study?

A

Odds ratio - an approximation of relative risk

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5
Q

What is an odds ratio?

A

(people with disease who were exposed/people without the disease who were exposed)/(people with the disease who weren’t exposed/people without the diease who weren’t exposed)

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6
Q

What does an odds ratio of 2 mean?

A

That the exposure doubles the likelihood of the outcome

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7
Q

What is a cohort study?

A

A longitudinal study that collects incidence data and compares outcomes between subgroups who were exposed to a risk factor and subgroups who were not

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8
Q

What is the outcome of cohort studies?

A

Relative risks

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9
Q

What is a prospective cohort study?

A

The study starts after exposure but before the outcome occurs

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10
Q

What is a retrospective cohort study?

A

The study starts after exposure and outcome occur

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11
Q

What is the benefit of a cohort study?

A

Can look at multiple outcomes and exposures

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12
Q

What are the difficulties of a cohort study?

A

it is difficult to study rare outcomes, it is expensive and difficult

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13
Q

What is active outcome ascertainment?

A

explicitly undertaking surveillance for outcome

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14
Q

What is passive outcome ascertainment?

A

database linkage done retrospectively

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15
Q

What is bias?

A

A systematic difference between or among groups that leads to an under or over estimation of true results

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16
Q

What is a selection bias?

A

A systematic difference in the characteristics of people selected for the study and those not selected or within groups being compared or between groups being compared or between those who stay in the study and those who don’t

17
Q

How is selection bias minimised?

A

careful recruitment, maximise response, minimise lost follow up

18
Q

What is information bias?

A

A systematic difference in the way information is collected between/among groups

19
Q

How is information bias minimised?

A

ensure that methods for collecting information are the same between/among groups

20
Q

What is confounding?

A

Where a 3rd variable independently predicts the outcome and is related to the exposure

21
Q

What are common confounders?

A

Age and sex

22
Q

How is confounding minimised?

A

By matching for age and sex

23
Q

Can confounding be dealt with in analysis?

A

yes

24
Q

Can bias be dealt with in analysis?

A

no