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IJE Advance Access originally published online on March 31, 2005
International Journal of Epidemiology 2005 34(3):680-687; doi:10.1093/ije/dyi060
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Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association © The Author 2005; all rights reserved.

Methodology

Proper interpretation of non-differential misclassification effects: expectations vs observations

Anne M Jurek1,3,*, Sander Greenland2, George Maldonado1 and Timothy R Church1

1 Division of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455–0392, USA
2 Department of Epidemiology and Department of Statistics, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

* Corresponding author. Community Health Department, Utah Valley State College, Orem, UT 84058, USA. E-mail:jurekan{at}uvsc.edu

Background Many investigators write as if non-differential exposure misclassification inevitably leads to a reduction in the strength of an estimated exposure–disease association. Unfortunately, non-differentiality alone is insufficient to guarantee bias towards the null. Furthermore, because bias refers to the average estimate across study repetitions rather than the result of a single study, bias towards the null is insufficient to guarantee that an observed estimate will be an underestimate. Thus, as noted before, exposure misclassification can spuriously increase the observed strength of an association even when the misclassification process is non-differential and the bias it produced is towards the null.

Methods We present additional results on this topic, including a simulation study of how often an observed relative risk is an overestimate of the true relative risk when the bias is towards the null.

Results The frequency of overestimation depends on many factors: the value of the true relative risk, exposure prevalence, baseline (unexposed) risk, misclassification rates, and other factors that influence bias and random error.

Conclusions Non-differentiality of exposure misclassification does not justify claims that the observed estimate must be an underestimate; further conditions must hold to get bias towards the null, and even when they do hold the observed estimate may by chance be an overestimate.


Keywords Bias, epidemiological methods, misclassification, non-differential, relative risk

Accepted 14 February 2005


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