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Chapter 1 Longitudinal Data Analysis

Themostcommonmedicalresearch designsis a \pre-post"studyinwhich a singlebaselinehealthstatusmeasurement is obtained,aninterven-tionis administered,anda singlefollow-upmeasurement is theoutcomemeasurement canbe as-sociatedwiththechangein example,if somesubjectsaregivenplacebo whileothersaregivenanactive drug,thetwogroupscanbe comparedto seeif thechangein theoutcomeis di erent forthosesubjectswhoareactivelytreatedas comparedto viewed as thesimplestformof a prospective nition: Alongitudinalstudyrefersto aninvestigationwherepartici-pant outcomesandpossiblytreatments or exposuresarecollectedat longitudinalstudygenerallyyieldsmultiple or \ repeated "measurementsoneach example,HIVpatients may be followedover timeandmonthlymeasuressuch as CD4counts,or viralloadarecollectedto charac-terizeimmunestatusanddiseaseburde nrespectively.

A longitudinal study generally yields multiple or \repeated" measurements on each subject. For example, HIV patients may be followed over time and ... Analysis of correlated data. Statistical analysis of longitudinal data ... number of correct responses minus the number of incorrect responses. We use data on a subset of men and women VPS ...

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Transcription of Chapter 1 Longitudinal Data Analysis

1 Themostcommonmedicalresearch designsis a \pre-post"studyinwhich a singlebaselinehealthstatusmeasurement is obtained,aninterven-tionis administered,anda singlefollow-upmeasurement is theoutcomemeasurement canbe as-sociatedwiththechangein example,if somesubjectsaregivenplacebo whileothersaregivenanactive drug,thetwogroupscanbe comparedto seeif thechangein theoutcomeis di erent forthosesubjectswhoareactivelytreatedas comparedto viewed as thesimplestformof a prospective nition: Alongitudinalstudyrefersto aninvestigationwherepartici-pant outcomesandpossiblytreatments or exposuresarecollectedat longitudinalstudygenerallyyieldsmultiple or \ repeated "measurementsoneach example,HIVpatients may be followedover timeandmonthlymeasuressuch as CD4counts,or viralloadarecollectedto charac-terizeimmunestatusanddiseaseburde nrespectively.

2 Such repeatedmea-suresdataarecorrelatedwithin subjectsandthus secondimportant outcomethatis commonlymeasuredin a longitudinalstudyis thetimeuntil a key clinicalevent such as diseaserecurrenceor LONGITUDINALDATA ANALYSISA nalysisof event timeendpoints is thefocusofsurvivalanalysiswhich iscoveredin Chapter ??.Longitudinalstudiesplay a key rolein epidemiology, clinicalresearch, characterizenormalgrowthandaging,to assessthee ectof riskfactorsonhumanhealth,andto evaluatethee ectivenessof a greatdealof e ortbuto erseveralbene- tsinclude:Bene tsof recorded. A prospective longitudinalstudymea-suresthenewoccuranc eof diseaseonsetcanbecorrelatedwithrecent changesin patient exposure.

3 In a prospective studypartic-ipants canhave theirexposurestatusrecordedat recalltheirexposure(a formofmeasurement error).In additionthetemporalorderof exposuresandoutcomesis individualchangein outcomes. A keystrengthof alongitudinalstudyis theability to measurechangein outcomesand/orexposureat to observe individualpatternsof timee ects:Cohort,Period, Age. Whenstudyingchangeover timetherearemany timescalesto birthsuch as 1945or 1963,periodis thecurrent timesuchas2003,andageis (period - cohort),forexample58= 2003-1945,and40 = longitudinalstudywithmeasurements at timest1; t2; : : : tncansimultaneouslycharacterizemultiplet imescalessuch asageandcohorte ectsusingcovariatesderivedfromthecalenda rtimeof visitandtheparticipant'sbirthyear:theage of subjectiat timetjis ageij= (tj birthi); andtheircohortis simplycohortij= [1996]discussesage,period, andcohorte ectsin theanalysisof forcohorte ects.

4 Ina cross-sectionalstudythecomparisonof subgroupsof di erent agescombinesthee ectsof agingandthee ectsof di erent , comparisonof outcomesmeasuredin 2003among58yearoldsubjectsandamong40year oldsubjectsre ectsboththefactthatthegroupsdi erby 18years(aging)andthefactthatthesubjectsw erebornin di erent example,thepublichealthinterventionssuch as vaccinationsavailablefora childunder10yearsof agemay diferduring1945-1955as comparedto thepreventive interventionsexperiencedin longitudinalstudythecohortunderstudyis xedandthus changesin timearenotconfoundedby cohortdi longitudinaldataanalysisopportunitiesin respiratoryepi-demiologyis presentedin WeissandWare[1996].

5 Thebene tsof a :Challengesof Thereis theriskof biasdueto incompletefollow-up,or \drop-out"of subjectsthatarefollowed totheplannedendof studydi erfromsubjectswhodiscontinue follow-upthena naive analysismay providesummariesthatarenotrepresenta-tiv e of correlated data . Statisticalanalysisof longitudinaldatarequiresmethods thatcanproperlyaccount fortheintra-subjectcor-relationof such correlationis ignoredtheninferencessuch as statisticaltestsor con denceintervalscanbe Althoughlongitudinaldesignso ertheop-portunity to associatechangesin exposurewithchangesin theoutcomeof interest,thedirectionof causality canbe complicatedby \feedback" example,in anobserva-tionalstudyof thee ectsof a drugonspeci cindicatorsof health.

6 A patient'scurrent healthstatusmay in uencethedrugexposureordosagereceivedin cinterestliesin thee ectof medicationonhealth,thisexamplehasrecipro calin uence4 CHAPTER1. LONGITUDINALDATA Analysis betweenexposureandoutcomeandposesanalyti caldi culty whentryingto separatethee ectof medicationonhealthfromthee thissubsectionwe give someexamplesof longitudinalstudiesandfocusontheprimarys cienti cmotivationin additionto keyoutcomeandcovariatemeasurements.( )ChildAsthmaManagement Program(CAMP){ In thisstudychildrenarerandomizedto di erent asthmamanagement multicenterclinicaltrialwhoseprimaryaimi s theevaluationof thelong-terme ectsof dailyinhaledanti-in ammatorymedicationuseonasthmastatusandlu nggrowthin childrenwithmildto moderateashtma(Sze eret ).}

7 Outcomesincludecontinuousmeasuresof pulmonaryfunctionandcatergoricalindicato rsof ambient pollutionandtheprevalenceof anenvironmentalexposurerequiresspeci cationof a lagbetweentheday of exposureandtheresultinge theairpollutionliteratureshortlagsof 0 to 2 days arecommonlyused(Sametet ;Yu et ).For boththeevaluationof treatmentandexposureto environmentalpollutionthescienti cquestionsfocusontheassociationbetweenan exposure(treatment, pollution) outcomesis of secondaryinterest,butmustbe acknowledgedto obtainvalidstatisticalinference.( )CysticFibrosisandPulmonaryFunction{ TheCysticFibro-sisFoundationmaintainsa registryof longitudinaldataforsubjectswithcystic asthe1-secondforcedexpiratoryvolume(FEV1 )}

8 Andpatient healthindicatorssuch as infectionwithPseudomonasaeruginosahave cobjective is to characterizethenaturalcourseof thediseaseandto estimatetheaveragerateof declinein determinewhethermeasuredpatient characteristicssuch asgenderandgenotype correlatewithdiseaseprogression,or withanincreasedrateof declinein a typicalobservationaldesignwherethelongit udinalnatureof thedataareimportant changein healthoutcomessuch as lungfunction.( )TheMulti-CenterAIDSC ohortStudy(MACS){ TheMACS studyenrolledmorethan3,000menwhowereat riskforacquisitionof HIV1(Kaslow et ).Thisprospective cohortstudyobservedN= 479inci-dent HIV1infectionsandhasbeenusedto particular,thisstudyhasdemonstratedthee ectof HIV1infectiononindicatorsof immunologicfunctionsuch as cquestionis whetherbaselinecharacteristicssuchas viralloadmeasuredimmediatelyafterserocon versionareassociatedwitha poor patient prognosisas indicatedby a greaterrateof declinein usethesedatato illustrateanalysisapproachesforcontinuou slongitudinalresponsedata.}

9 ( )HIVNETI nformedConsent Substudy{ Numerousreportssug-gestthattheprocessof obtaininginformedconsent in orderto participateinresearch studiesis ,forpreventive HIVvaccinetrialsa prototype informedconsent processwas evaluatedamongN= 4;892subjectsparticipatingin theVaccinePreparednessStudy(VPS).Approxi -mately20%of subjectswereselectedat randomandasked to participatein amock informedconsent process(Colettiet ).Participant knowledgeof key vaccinetrialconceptswas evalulatedat baselinepriorto theinformedconsent visitwhich occuredduringa special3 month thenassessedforallpar-ticipants at thescheduled6, 12, basiclongitudinalextensionof a ,anda totalscorethatcalculatesthenumber of correctresponsesminusthenumber of subsetof focusonsubjectswhowereconsideredat highriskof HIVacquisitiondueto thischapterwe useYijto denotetheoutcomemeasuredon subjectiat timetij.}

10 Theindexi= 1;2; : : : ; Nis forsubject,andtheindexj= 1;2; : : : ; nis forobservationswithina designedlongitudinalstudythemeasurement timeswillfollow a protocolwitha commonsetof follow-up6 CHAPTER1. LONGITUDINALDATA Analysis times,tij=tj. For example,in theHIVNETI nformedConsent Studysub-jectsweremeasuredat baseline,t1= 0, at 6 monthsafterenrollment,t2= 6months,andat 12and18months,t3= 12months,t4= letXijdenotecovariatesassociatedwithobse rvationYij. Commoncovariatesin a longitudinalstudyincludethetime,tij, andperson-level characteristicssuch as treatment assignment, or cinterestoftenfocusesonthemeanresponseas a func-tionof covariatessuch astreatment andtime,proper statisticalinferencemustaccount forthewithin-personcorrelationof ne jk=corr(Yij; Yik), thewithin-subjectcorrelationbetweenobser vationsat timestjandtk.


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