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Reflection on modern methods: trial emulation in the presence of immortal-time bias. Assessing the benefit of major surgery for elderly lung cancer patients using observational data.
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- المؤلفون: Maringe, Camille1 (AUTHOR) ; Majano, Sara Benitez1 (AUTHOR); Exarchakou, Aimilia1 (AUTHOR); Smith, Matthew1 (AUTHOR); Rachet, Bernard1 (AUTHOR); Belot, Aurélien1 (AUTHOR); Leyrat, Clémence1,2 (AUTHOR); Benitez Majano, Sara3 (AUTHOR)
- المصدر:
International Journal of Epidemiology. Oct2020, Vol. 49 Issue 5, p1719-1729. 11p.
- الموضوع:
- معلومة اضافية
- نبذة مختصرة :
Acquiring real-world evidence is crucial to support health policy, but observational studies are prone to serious biases. An approach was recently proposed to overcome confounding and immortal-time biases within the emulated trial framework. This tutorial provides a step-by-step description of the design and analysis of emulated trials, as well as R and Stata code, to facilitate its use in practice. The steps consist in: (i) specifying the target trial and inclusion criteria; (ii) cloning patients; (iii) defining censoring and survival times; (iv) estimating the weights to account for informative censoring introduced by design; and (v) analysing these data. These steps are illustrated with observational data to assess the benefit of surgery among 70-89-year-old patients diagnosed with early-stage lung cancer. Because of the severe unbalance of the patient characteristics between treatment arms (surgery yes/no), a naïve Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of the initial cohort severely overestimated the benefit of surgery on 1-year survival (22% difference), as did a survival analysis of the cloned dataset when informative censoring was ignored (17% difference). By contrast, the estimated weights adequately removed the covariate imbalance. The weighted analysis still showed evidence of a benefit, though smaller (11% difference), of surgery among older lung cancer patients on 1-year survival. Complementing the CERBOT tool, this tutorial explains how to proceed to conduct emulated trials using observational data in the presence of immortal-time bias. The strength of this approach is its transparency and its principles that are easily understandable by non-specialists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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