Considering pregnancies as repeated versus independent events: An empirical comparison of common approaches across selected perinatal outcomes.
Perinatal epidemiology
cohort selection
repeated births
selection bias
Journal
American journal of obstetrics & gynecology MFM
ISSN: 2589-9333
Titre abrégé: Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101746609
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
10 Jul 2024
10 Jul 2024
Historique:
received:
16
05
2024
accepted:
25
06
2024
medline:
13
7
2024
pubmed:
13
7
2024
entrez:
12
7
2024
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
In population-based research, pregnancy may be a repeated event. Despite published guidance on how to address repeated pregnancies to the same individual, a variety of approaches are observed in perinatal epidemiological studies. While some of these approaches are supported by the chosen research question, others are consequences of constraints inherent to a given dataset (e.g., missing parity information). These decisions determine how appropriately a given research question can be answered and overall generalizability. To compare common cohort selection and analytic approaches used for perinatal epidemiological research by assessing the prevalence of two perinatal outcomes and their association with a clinical and a social independent variable STUDY DESIGN: Using vital records linked to maternal hospital discharge records for singleton births, we created four cohorts: (1) all-births (2) randomly selected one birth per individual (3) first observed birth per individual (4) primiparous-births (parity 1). Sampling of births was not conditional on cluster (i.e., we did not sample all births by a given mother, but rather sampled individual births). Study outcomes were severe maternal morbidity and preeclampsia/eclampsia, and the independent variables were self-reported race/ethnicity (as a social factor) and systemic lupus erythematosus. Comparing the four cohorts, we assessed the distribution of maternal characteristics, the prevalence of outcomes, overall and stratified by parity, and risk ratios for the associations of outcomes with independent variables. Among all-births, we then compared risk ratios from three analytic strategies: with standard inference that assumes independently sampled births to the same mother in the model, with cluster-robust inference, and adjusting for parity. We observed minor differences in the population characteristics between the all-birth (N=2,736,693), random-selection, and first-observed birth cohorts (both N=2,284,660), with more substantial differences between these cohorts and the primiparous-births cohort (N=1,054,684). Outcome prevalence was consistently lowest among all-births and highest among primiparous-births (e.g., severe maternal morbidity 18.9 per 1,000 births among primiparous-births vs. 16.6 per 1,000 births among all-births). When stratified by parity, outcome prevalence was always the lowest in births of parity 2 and highest among births of parity 1 for both outcomes. Risk ratios differed for study outcomes across all four cohorts, with the most pronounced differences between the primiparous-birth cohort and other cohorts. Among all-births, robust inference minimally impacted the confidence bounds of estimates, compared to the standard inference, i.e., crude estimates (e.g., lupus-severe maternal morbidity association: 4.01, 95% CI 3.54-4.55 vs. 4.01, 95% CI 3.53-4.56 for crude estimate), while adjusting for parity slightly shifted estimates, towards the null for severe maternal morbidity and away from the null for preeclampsia/eclampsia. Researchers should consider the alignment between the methods they use, their sampling strategy, and their research question. This could include refining the research question to better match inference possible for available data, considering alternative data sources, and appropriately noting data limitations and resulting bias, as well as the generalizability of findings. If parity is an established effect modifier, stratified results should be presented.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
In population-based research, pregnancy may be a repeated event. Despite published guidance on how to address repeated pregnancies to the same individual, a variety of approaches are observed in perinatal epidemiological studies. While some of these approaches are supported by the chosen research question, others are consequences of constraints inherent to a given dataset (e.g., missing parity information). These decisions determine how appropriately a given research question can be answered and overall generalizability.
OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
To compare common cohort selection and analytic approaches used for perinatal epidemiological research by assessing the prevalence of two perinatal outcomes and their association with a clinical and a social independent variable STUDY DESIGN: Using vital records linked to maternal hospital discharge records for singleton births, we created four cohorts: (1) all-births (2) randomly selected one birth per individual (3) first observed birth per individual (4) primiparous-births (parity 1). Sampling of births was not conditional on cluster (i.e., we did not sample all births by a given mother, but rather sampled individual births). Study outcomes were severe maternal morbidity and preeclampsia/eclampsia, and the independent variables were self-reported race/ethnicity (as a social factor) and systemic lupus erythematosus. Comparing the four cohorts, we assessed the distribution of maternal characteristics, the prevalence of outcomes, overall and stratified by parity, and risk ratios for the associations of outcomes with independent variables. Among all-births, we then compared risk ratios from three analytic strategies: with standard inference that assumes independently sampled births to the same mother in the model, with cluster-robust inference, and adjusting for parity.
RESULTS
RESULTS
We observed minor differences in the population characteristics between the all-birth (N=2,736,693), random-selection, and first-observed birth cohorts (both N=2,284,660), with more substantial differences between these cohorts and the primiparous-births cohort (N=1,054,684). Outcome prevalence was consistently lowest among all-births and highest among primiparous-births (e.g., severe maternal morbidity 18.9 per 1,000 births among primiparous-births vs. 16.6 per 1,000 births among all-births). When stratified by parity, outcome prevalence was always the lowest in births of parity 2 and highest among births of parity 1 for both outcomes. Risk ratios differed for study outcomes across all four cohorts, with the most pronounced differences between the primiparous-birth cohort and other cohorts. Among all-births, robust inference minimally impacted the confidence bounds of estimates, compared to the standard inference, i.e., crude estimates (e.g., lupus-severe maternal morbidity association: 4.01, 95% CI 3.54-4.55 vs. 4.01, 95% CI 3.53-4.56 for crude estimate), while adjusting for parity slightly shifted estimates, towards the null for severe maternal morbidity and away from the null for preeclampsia/eclampsia.
CONCLUSION
CONCLUSIONS
Researchers should consider the alignment between the methods they use, their sampling strategy, and their research question. This could include refining the research question to better match inference possible for available data, considering alternative data sources, and appropriately noting data limitations and resulting bias, as well as the generalizability of findings. If parity is an established effect modifier, stratified results should be presented.
Identifiants
pubmed: 38996915
pii: S2589-9333(24)00160-5
doi: 10.1016/j.ajogmf.2024.101434
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
101434Informations de copyright
Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.
Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts
Declaration of competing interest The authors report no conflict of interest.