Case Control Design
Case Control Design
Objectives
1. Describe the case-control study design and the rationale for its use 2. Define source population 3. Discuss elements of case and control selection 4. List potential sources of cases and controls 5. Describe types of case-control studies 6. Discuss primary design concerns in case-control studies 7. List the strengths and weaknesses of casecontrol studies
Case-Control Study
An alternative to the cohort study for assessing exposure-disease relationships Subjects chosen based on disease status and assessed for previous exposure Exposure data may be measured at the time of the study or gathered from existing data Analysis by the odds ratio (as an estimate of the relative risk) Particularly susceptible to certain types of bias which dictates design characteristics But optimized speed and efficiency.
Used as an efficient version of a cohort study Used to estimate the IDR/CIR with the OR
cases 50 50 100
PT 9975 = C 99975 = D
Recall.
OR ~ IDR/CIR when either,
The disease is rare in the population (prevalence 0.05) Controls are selected to represent the same source population that gives rise to the cases, not just the non-cases
Source Population
The Source Population is:
The source of subjects for a particular study Defined by the participant selection methods of your study.
Selection of Cases
Clearly define the source population
Establish strict diagnostic criteria for case definition, independent of exposure (cases really cases)
Either incident or prevalent cases, but incident are ideal Can be selected cross-sectionally (at a point in time) or longitudinally longitudinally is a better choice Can use all cases within the population or a sample of the population
Selection of Controls
Without a well defined source population, it is difficult or impossible to select unbiased controls.
Goal is to choose cases and controls so that their proportion with the risk factor (E) in the study does not vary much more than sampling error from the source population. Example: Cohort study:
Cases 50 = A 50 = B Population 10000 100,000 Person-Time 9975 = C 99975 = D
E E
Sampling fraction for cases = 100% Sampling fraction for controls = .5%
E E
Cases 50 = A 50 = B
Bias in a case-based case-control study with a cross-sectional ascertainment: only cases with long survival are included.
Case-Cohort Study Case-control study in which the controls are selected from the baseline cohort
2. Case-Cohort Example
X = occurrence of outcome of case control study
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
X
X
X
X X X
Time
Potential controls: A random sample of the total cohort at baseline.
Case-Cohort Example
Cardiac Autonomic Function and Incident Coronary Heart Disease: A Population-base Case-Cohort Study (AJE
1997;145:696-706)
Cohort: Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study (4 centers) Baseline cohort = 15,800 men and women 45-64 years old Case-cohort sample:
Cases = 137 incident cases of CHD Controls = stratified random sample of 2,253 examinees free of CHD at baseline
Hybrid Design: Nested Case-Control study the controls are selected at each time when a case occurs (incidence density sampling).
Rare disease assumption not needed, OR ~ IDR/CIR for both common and rare diseases using this strategy
X X X
Time Potential controls: individuals at risk of developing CaseControl outcome at time ti, when a case occurs. Example: For case #1 (subject 3), all other subjects are potential controls, even though some of them later become cases
Follow-up conducted by using license records from the department of motor vehicles, and review of death certificates
Nested design
Cases women in the CHDS cohort who developed breast cancer, identified through the California Cancer Registry Controls were members of the cohort who had not been diagnosed at that point in time with breast cancer Exposure assessment: Frozen sera accrued between 1959-1966 Data analysis: logistic regression
Used as an efficient version of a cohort study Used to estimate the IDR/CIR with the OR
OR ~ RR
Only used when you want to estimate RR Rare = disease < 0.10 Most diseases are rare If controls are selected to represent the source population In a case cohort study OR ~ CIR In a nested case-control study OR ~ IDR
Information Bias
can occur when there is bias in the measurement of exposure resulting in misclassification since exposure is ascertained after disease has occurred.