Is the Product Method More Efficient Than the Difference Method for Assessing Mediation?

被引:7
作者
Cheng, Chao [1 ,2 ]
Spiegelman, Donna [1 ,2 ]
Li, Fan [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Biostat, 135 Coll St,Suite 200, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
[2] Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Ctr Methods Implementat & Prevent Sci, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
asymptotic relative efficiency; mediation analysis; mediation proportion; CAUSAL INTERPRETATION; INFERENCE; RATIOS; RISK; SAS;
D O I
10.1093/aje/kwac144
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Mediation analysis is widely used in biomedical research to quantify the extent to which the effect from an exposure on a health outcome is through a mediator and the extent to which the effect is direct. A traditional approach for quantifying mediation is through the difference method. The other popular approach uses a counterfactual framework from which the product method arises. However, there is little prior work to articulate which method is more efficient for estimating 2 key quantities in mediation analysis, the natural indirect effect and mediation proportion. To fill in this gap, we investigated the asymptotic relative efficiency for mediation measure estimators given by the product method and the difference method. We considered 4 data types characterized by continuous and binary mediators and outcomes. Under certain conditions, we show analytically that the product method is equally efficient to the difference method, or more efficient. However, our numerical studies demonstrate that the difference method is usually at least 90% as efficient as the product method under realistic scenarios in epidemiologic research, especially for estimating the mediation proportion. We demonstrate the efficiency results by analyzing the MaxART study (Eswatini, 2014-2017), which aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of the early access to antiretroviral therapy among human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients.
引用
收藏
页码:84 / 92
页数:9
相关论文
共 20 条
[1]   Testing for the indirect effect under the null for genome-wide mediation analyses [J].
Barfield, Richard ;
Shen, Jincheng ;
Just, Allan C. ;
Vokonas, Pantel S. ;
Schwartz, Joel ;
Baccarelli, Andrea A. ;
VanderWeele, Tyler J. ;
Lin, Xihong .
GENETIC EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2017, 41 (08) :824-833
[2]   Effect of the "Normalized Epidemic Prevention and Control Requirements" on hospital-acquired and community-acquired infections in China [J].
Chen, Caiyun ;
Zhu, Ping ;
Zhang, Yongxiang ;
Liu, Bo .
BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2021, 21 (01)
[3]   The Consistency Statement in Causal Inference A Definition or an Assumption? [J].
Cole, Stephen R. ;
Frangakis, Constantine E. .
EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2009, 20 (01) :3-5
[4]   Exact parametric causal mediation analysis for a binary outcome with a binary mediator [J].
Doretti, Marco ;
Raggi, Martina ;
Stanghellini, Elena .
STATISTICAL METHODS AND APPLICATIONS, 2022, 31 (01) :87-108
[5]  
Greenland S, 1999, STAT SCI, V14, P29
[6]   "Proportion Explained": A Causal Interpretation for Standard Measures of Indirect Effect? [J].
Hafeman, Danella M. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2009, 170 (11) :1443-1448
[7]   When Is the Difference Method Conservative for Assessing Mediation? [J].
Jiang, Zhichao ;
VanderWeele, Tyler J. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2015, 182 (02) :105-108
[8]   PROCESS ANALYSIS - ESTIMATING MEDIATION IN TREATMENT EVALUATIONS [J].
JUDD, CM ;
KENNY, DA .
EVALUATION REVIEW, 1981, 5 (05) :602-619
[9]   Early access to antiretroviral therapy versus standard of care among HIV-positive participants in Eswatini in the public health sector: the MaxART stepped-wedge randomized controlled trial [J].
Khan, Shaukat ;
Spiegelman, Donna ;
Walsh, Fiona ;
Mazibuko, Sikhatele ;
Pasipamire, Munyaradzi ;
Chai, Boyang ;
Reis, Ria ;
Mlambo, Khudzie ;
Delva, Wim ;
Khumalo, Gavin ;
Zwane, Mandisa ;
Fleming, Yvette ;
Mafara, Emma ;
Hettema, Anita ;
Lejeune, Charlotte ;
Chao, Ariel ;
Baernighausen, Till ;
Okello, Velephi .
JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL AIDS SOCIETY, 2020, 23 (09)
[10]   A SIMULATION STUDY OF MEDIATED EFFECT MEASURES [J].
MACKINNON, DP ;
WARSI, G ;
DWYER, JH .
MULTIVARIATE BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH, 1995, 30 (01) :41-62