Understanding Treatment Effect Estimates When Treatment Effects Are Heterogeneous for More Than One Outcome

被引:12
作者
Brooks, John M. [1 ,2 ]
Chapman, Cole G. [3 ,4 ]
Schroeder, Mary C. [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ South Carolina, 915 Greene St,Room 303D, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[2] Ctr Effectiveness Res Orthopaed, 915 Greene St,Room 303D, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[3] Univ South Carolina, 915 Greene St,Room 303B, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[4] Ctr Effectiveness Res Orthopaed, 915 Greene St,Room 303B, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[5] Univ Iowa, Coll Pharm, 115 S Grand Ave,Room S525, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA
关键词
ACUTE MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION; EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE; RISK-TREATMENT PARADOX; INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLES; UNITED-STATES; QUALITY; PATIENT; MODELS; STRATIFICATION; CAUSALITY;
D O I
10.1007/s40258-018-0380-z
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Background Patient-centred care requires evidence of treatment effects across many outcomes. Outcomes can be beneficial (e.g. increased survival or cure rates) or detrimental (e.g. adverse events, pain associated with treatment, treatment costs, time required for treatment). Treatment effects may also be heterogeneous across outcomes and across patients. Randomized controlled trials are usually insufficient to supply evidence across outcomes. Observational data analysis is an alternative, with the caveat that the treatments observed are choices. Real-world treatment choice often involves complex assessment of expected effects across the array of outcomes. Failure to account for this complexity when interpreting treatment effect estimates could lead to clinical and policy mistakes. Objective Our objective was to assess the properties of treatment effect estimates based on choice when treatments have heterogeneous effects on both beneficial and detrimental outcomes across patients. Methods Simulation methods were used to highlight the sensitivity of treatment effect estimates to the distributions of treatment effects across patients across outcomes. Scenarios with alternative correlations between benefit and detriment treatment effects across patients were used. Regression and instrumental variable estimators were applied to the simulated data for both outcomes. Results True treatment effect parameters are sensitive to the relationships of treatment effectiveness across outcomes in each study population. In each simulation scenario, treatment effect estimate interpretations for each outcome are aligned with results shown previously in single outcome models, but these estimates vary across simulated populations with the correlations of treatment effects across patients across outcomes. Conclusion If estimator assumptions are valid, estimates across outcomes can be used to assess the optimality of treatment rates in a study population. However, because true treatment effect parameters are sensitive to correlations of treatment effects across outcomes, decision makers should be cautious about generalizing estimates to other populations.
引用
收藏
页码:381 / 393
页数:13
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]   Treatment effect heterogeneity in theory and practice [J].
Angrist, JD .
ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 2004, 114 (494) :C52-C83
[2]  
Angrist JD, 2009, MOSTLY HARMLESS ECONOMETRICS: AN EMPIRICISTS COMPANION, P1
[3]  
Angrist JD, 2013, ECON SOC MONOGR, P401
[4]   Use of instrumental variables in the presence of heterogeneity and self-selection: An application to treatments of breast cancer patients [J].
Basu, Anirban ;
Heckman, James J. ;
Navarro-Lozano, Salvador ;
Urzua, Sergio .
HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2007, 16 (11) :1133-1157
[5]  
Ben-Akiva M, 1985, ANAL DISCRETE CHOICE
[6]   PROBLEMS WITH INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLES ESTIMATION WHEN THE CORRELATION BETWEEN THE INSTRUMENTS AND THE ENDOGENOUS EXPLANATORY VARIABLE IS WEAK [J].
BOUND, J ;
JAEGER, DA ;
BAKER, RM .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION, 1995, 90 (430) :443-450
[7]  
Brooks JM, 2000, INQUIRY-J HEALTH CAR, V37, P75
[8]   Heterogeneity and the interpretation of treatment effect estimates from risk adjustment and instrumental variable methods [J].
Brooks, John M. ;
Chrischilles, Elizabeth A. .
MEDICAL CARE, 2007, 45 (10) :S123-S130
[9]   The Identification Process Using Choice Theory Is Needed to Match Design With Objectives in CER [J].
Brooks, John M. ;
Chapman, Cole G. ;
Cozad, Melanie J. .
MEDICAL CARE, 2017, 55 (02) :91-93
[10]  
Brooks JM, 2015, MED CARE, V53, P324, DOI 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000322