Suppr超能文献

研究设计的流行病学

Epidemiology Of Study Design

作者信息

Munnangi Swapna, Boktor Sameh W.

机构信息

Nassau University Medical Center

Penn State College of Medicine

Abstract

In epidemiology, researchers are interested in measuring or assessing the relationship of exposure with a disease or an outcome. As a first step, they define the hypothesis based on the research question and then decide which study design will be best suited to answer that question. How the researcher conducts the investigation is directed by the chosen study design. The study designs can be broadly classified as experimental or observational based on the approach used to assess whether exposure and an outcome are associated. In an experimental study design, researchers assign patients to intervention and control/comparison groups in an attempt to isolate the effects of the intervention. Being able to control various aspects of the experimental study design enables the researchers to identify causal links between interventions and outcomes of interest. In several instances, an experimental study design may not be feasible or suitable; observational studies are conducted in such situations. As the name indicates, observational studies involve merely observing the patients in a non-controlled environment without actually interfering or manipulating with other aspects of the study and therefore are non-experimental. The observation can be prospective, retrospective, or current, depending on the subtype of an observational study. Case-Control Studies Case-control studies are used to determine the degree of associations between various risk factors and outcomes. The factors that affect the risk of a disease are called exposures. Case-control studies can help identify beneficial or harmful exposures. As the name suggests, there are two groups of patient cases and controls in a case-control study. Cases are patients who have a particular disease, condition, or disability. Controls are those patients that do not have the disease. Typically, researchers identify appropriate representative controls for the cases that they are studying from the general population. Then they retrospectively look in the past for the possible exposures these patients might have had to a risk factor. Selecting the patients for the control group is a very critical component of research based on case-control studies. Due to the retrospective nature of the study design, case-control studies are subject to recall bias. Case-control studies are inexpensive, efficient, and often less time-consuming to conduct. This study design is especially suitable for rare diseases that have long latency periods. Case-Crossover Studies Case-crossover studies are helpful to study triggers within an individual. When the researcher is studying a transient exposure or risk factor, the case-crossover design is useful. This is a relatively new study design where there is a case and a control component, both of which come from the same individual. Each case is self-matched by serving as its own control. Determining the control and case components period is a critical and difficult aspect of a case-crossover study. Cohort studies initially classify patients into two groups based on their exposure status. Cohorts are followed over time to see who develops the disease in the exposed and non-exposed groups. Cohort studies can be retrospective or prospective. Incidence can be directly calculated from a cohort study as you begin with exposed and unexposed patients, unlike a case-control study where you start with diseased and non-diseased patients. Relative risk is the measure of effect for a cohort study. Cohort studies are subject to very low recall bias, and multiple outcomes can be studied simultaneously. One of the disadvantages of cohort studies is that they are more prone to selection bias. Studying rare diseases and outcomes that have long follow-up periods can be very expensive and time-consuming using cohort studies. Cross-Sectional Studies Cross-sectional studies are observational in nature and give a snapshot of the characteristics of study subjects in a single point of time. Unlike cohort studies, cross-sectional studies do not have a follow-up period and therefore are relatively simple to conduct. As the exposure status/outcome of interest information is collected in a single moment in time, often by surveys, cross-sectional study design cannot provide a cause-effect relationship and is the weakest of the observational designs. This study design is generally used to assess the prevalence of a disease in a population. Ecological Studies Ecological studies are used when data at an individual level is unavailable, or large-scale comparisons are needed to study the population-level effect of exposures on a disease condition. Therefore, ecological study results are applicable only at the population level. The types of measures in ecological studies are aggregates of individual-level data. These studies, therefore, are subject to a type of confounding called an ecological fallacy, which occurs when relationships identified at group level data are assumed to be true for individuals. Ecological studies are generally used in public health research. Randomized Clinical Trials Randomized clinical trials or randomized control trials (RCT) are considered the gold standard of study design. In an RCT, the researcher randomly assigns the subjects to a control group and an experimental group. Randomization in RCT avoids confounding and minimizes selection bias. This enables the researcher to have similar experimental and control groups, thereby enabling them to isolate the effect of an intervention. The experimental group gets the exposure/treatment, which can be an agent involved in causation, prevention, or treatment of a disease. The control group receives no treatment, a placebo treatment, or another standard of care treatment depending on the study's objective. The groups are then followed prospectively to see who develops the outcome of interest. RCT’s are expensive, and researchers using this study design often face issues with the integrity of randomization due to refusals, drops outs, crossovers, and non-compliance.

摘要

在流行病学中,研究人员感兴趣的是测量或评估暴露与疾病或结果之间的关系。第一步,他们根据研究问题定义假设,然后决定哪种研究设计最适合回答该问题。研究人员如何进行调查由所选的研究设计指导。根据用于评估暴露与结果是否相关的方法,研究设计可大致分为实验性或观察性。在实验性研究设计中,研究人员将患者分配到干预组和对照组/比较组,试图分离干预的效果。能够控制实验性研究设计的各个方面使研究人员能够确定干预措施与感兴趣的结果之间的因果联系。在某些情况下,实验性研究设计可能不可行或不合适;在这种情况下进行观察性研究。顾名思义,观察性研究仅涉及在不受控制的环境中观察患者,而不实际干扰或操纵研究的其他方面,因此是非实验性的。观察可以是前瞻性、回顾性或当前性的,这取决于观察性研究的亚型。

病例对照研究

病例对照研究用于确定各种风险因素与结果之间的关联程度。影响疾病风险的因素称为暴露。病例对照研究有助于识别有益或有害暴露。顾名思义,病例对照研究中有两组患者——病例组和对照组。病例是患有特定疾病、状况或残疾的患者。对照组是没有该疾病的患者。通常,研究人员从一般人群中为他们正在研究的病例确定合适的代表性对照组。然后他们回顾过去,寻找这些患者可能接触过的风险因素。为对照组选择患者是基于病例对照研究的研究的一个非常关键的组成部分。由于研究设计的回顾性性质,病例对照研究容易受到回忆偏倚的影响。病例对照研究成本低、效率高,而且进行起来通常耗时较少。这种研究设计特别适用于潜伏期长的罕见疾病。

病例交叉研究

病例交叉研究有助于研究个体内部的触发因素。当研究人员研究短暂暴露或风险因素时,病例交叉设计很有用。这是一种相对较新的研究设计,其中有一个病例和一个对照部分,两者都来自同一个个体。每个病例通过作为自己的对照进行自我匹配。确定对照和病例部分的时间段是病例交叉研究的一个关键且困难的方面。

队列研究

队列研究最初根据患者的暴露状态将其分为两组。随着时间的推移对队列进行跟踪,以观察暴露组和非暴露组中谁患上了疾病。队列研究可以是回顾性的或前瞻性的。与病例对照研究从患病和未患病患者开始不同,队列研究可以直接计算发病率,因为队列研究从暴露和未暴露的患者开始。相对风险是队列研究的效应量度。队列研究受到的回忆偏倚非常低,并且可以同时研究多个结果。队列研究的缺点之一是它们更容易受到选择偏倚的影响。使用队列研究来研究罕见疾病和具有长随访期的结果可能非常昂贵且耗时。

横断面研究

横断面研究本质上是观察性的,它给出了研究对象在单个时间点的特征快照。与队列研究不同,横断面研究没有随访期,因此相对容易进行。由于暴露状态/感兴趣的结果信息通常通过调查在单个时间点收集,横断面研究设计无法提供因果关系,并且是观察性设计中最弱的。这种研究设计通常用于评估人群中疾病的患病率。

生态学研究

当无法获得个体层面的数据,或者需要进行大规模比较以研究暴露对疾病状况的人群层面影响时,使用生态学研究。因此,生态学研究结果仅适用于人群层面。生态学研究中的测量类型是个体层面数据的汇总。因此,这些研究容易受到一种称为生态学谬误 的混杂影响,当在群体层面数据中确定的关系被假定对个体也成立时就会出现这种情况。生态学研究通常用于公共卫生研究。

随机临床试验

随机临床试验或随机对照试验(RCT)被认为是研究设计的金标准。在RCT中,研究人员将受试者随机分配到对照组和实验组。RCT中的随机化避免了混杂并最大限度地减少了选择偏倚。这使研究人员能够拥有相似的实验组和对照组,从而能够分离干预的效果。实验组接受暴露/治疗,这可以是与疾病的病因、预防或治疗有关的一种药剂。对照组根据研究目的接受无治疗、安慰剂治疗或另一种标准护理治疗。然后对这些组进行前瞻性跟踪,以观察谁出现了感兴趣的结果。RCT成本高昂,使用这种研究设计的研究人员经常因拒绝、退出、交叉和不依从等问题而面临随机化完整性方面的问题。

相似文献

5
The future of Cochrane Neonatal.考克兰新生儿协作网的未来。
Early Hum Dev. 2020 Nov;150:105191. doi: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2020.105191. Epub 2020 Sep 12.

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验