Department of Health and Inequality, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Sandakerveien 24c, Bygg B, 0473, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Health Registry Research and Development, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Bergen, Norway.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2020 Nov 23;20(1):710. doi: 10.1186/s12884-020-03384-y.
The Medical Birth Registry of Norway (MBRN) provides national coverage of all births. While retrieval of most of the information in the birth records is mandatory, mothers may refrain to provide information on her smoking status. The proportion of women with unknown smoking status varied greatly over time, between hospitals, and by demographic groups. We investigated if incomplete data on smoking in the MBRN may have contributed to a biased smoking prevalence.
In a study population of all 904,982 viable and singleton births during 1999-2014, we investigated main predictor variables influencing the unknown smoking status of the mothers' using linear multivariable regression. Thereafter, we applied machine learning to predict annual smoking prevalence (95% CI) in the same group of unknown smoking status, assuming missing-not-at-random.
Overall, the proportion of women with unknown smoking status was 14.4%. Compared to the Nordic country region of origin, women from Europe outside the Nordic region had 15% (95% CI 12-17%) increased adjusted risk to have unknown smoking status. Correspondingly, the increased risks for women from Asia was 17% (95% CI 15-19%) and Africa 26% (95% CI 23-29%). The most important machine learning prediction variables regarding maternal smoking were education, ethnic background, marital status and birth weight. We estimated a change from the annual observed smoking prevalence among the women with known smoking status in the range of - 5.5 to 1.1% when combining observed and predicted smoking prevalence.
The predicted total smoking prevalence was only marginally modified compared to the observed prevalence in the group with known smoking status. This implies that MBRN-data may be trusted for health surveillance and research.
挪威医学出生登记处(MBRN)提供了所有出生的国家范围的数据。虽然出生记录中的大部分信息都是强制性检索的,但母亲可能会选择不提供其吸烟状况的信息。在不同时间、不同医院以及不同人群中,具有未知吸烟状况的女性比例差异很大。我们研究了 MBRN 中不完全的吸烟数据是否可能导致了吸烟流行率的偏差。
在一项研究人群为 1999 年至 2014 年期间所有 904982 例活产单胎出生的研究中,我们使用线性多变量回归调查了影响母亲未知吸烟状况的主要预测变量。然后,我们应用机器学习来预测同一组未知吸烟状况的年度吸烟流行率(95%CI),假设缺失数据不是随机的。
总体而言,具有未知吸烟状况的女性比例为 14.4%。与北欧国家原籍相比,来自欧洲非北欧地区的女性具有 15%(95%CI 12-17%)的调整后未知吸烟状况的风险增加。相应地,亚洲女性的风险增加了 17%(95%CI 15-19%),非洲女性的风险增加了 26%(95%CI 23-29%)。关于母亲吸烟的最重要的机器学习预测变量是教育程度、种族背景、婚姻状况和出生体重。我们估计,当结合观察到的和预测的吸烟流行率时,在具有已知吸烟状况的女性中,每年观察到的吸烟流行率会发生-5.5%到 1.1%的变化。
与具有已知吸烟状况的组相比,预测的总吸烟流行率仅略有变化。这意味着 MBRN 数据可用于健康监测和研究。