不一致:在体育活动和肥胖的研究中,对连续或共同二分结果使用优势比引起的关注。

Gina S Lovasi, Lindsay J Underhill, Darby Jack, Catherine Richards, Christopher Weiss, Andrew Rundle
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引用次数: 50

摘要

目的:肥胖与建筑环境的研究往往采用logistic回归和相应的参数优势比。对肥胖等常见结局使用比值比可能会不必要地妨碍研究结果的有效性、解释和交流。方法:我们确定了使用优势比引起的三个关键问题,并通过对13,102名纽约市居民的步行性和体重指数的研究数据来说明这些问题。结果:首先,身体质量指数等连续测量的二分类丢弃了理论上的相关信息,降低了统计能力,放大了测量误差。其次,比值比比患病率高(离零值更远);这种通货膨胀对于罕见的结果来说微不足道,但对于肥胖等常见结果来说却很重要。第三,在相互作用的测试中,比值比可能导致不正确的结论。某一特定子组的比值比可能更高,因为与其他子组相比,结果更常见(并且比值比膨胀)。结论:我们的建议是在可行的情况下充分利用连续的结局数据,并在常见的二分类结局中使用患病率比代替优势比。当必须使用比值比时,作者应记录各暴露组的结果患病率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
At Odds: Concerns Raised by Using Odds Ratios for Continuous or Common Dichotomous Outcomes in Research on Physical Activity and Obesity.

PURPOSE: Research on obesity and the built environment has often featured logistic regression and the corresponding parameter, the odds ratio. Use of odds ratios for common outcomes such obesity may unnecessarily hinder the validity, interpretation, and communication of research findings. METHODS: We identified three key issues raised by the use of odds ratios, illustrating them with data on walkability and body mass index from a study of 13,102 New York City residents. RESULTS: First, dichotomization of continuous measures such as body mass index discards theoretically relevant information, reduces statistical power, and amplifies measurement error. Second, odds ratios are systematically higher (further from the null) than prevalence ratios; this inflation is trivial for rare outcomes, but substantial for common outcomes like obesity. Third, odds ratios can lead to incorrect conclusions during tests of interactions. The odds ratio in a particular subgroup might higher simply because the outcome is more common (and the odds ratio inflated) compared with other subgroups. CONCLUSION: Our recommendations are to take full advantage of continuous outcome data when feasible and to use prevalence ratios in place of odds ratios for common dichotomous outcomes. When odds ratios must be used, authors should document outcome prevalence across exposure groups.

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