Title of article
Ascertainment Bias in Family-based Case-Control Studies
Author/Authors
Siegmund، Kimberly D. نويسنده , , Langholz، Bryan نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
-874
From page
875
To page
0
Abstract
In a family-matched case-control study, a population-based sample of cases is selected from a well-defined geographic region over a fixed period of time. For diseases of adult onset, the control is generally a sibling or cousin who is matched on sex and age without regard to location of residence. Such a design can lead to biased estimates of environmental relative risk if the prevalence of an environmental risk factor varies by the geographic region from which the cases and controls are drawn. However, assuming the independence of genotype and environmental exposure, the estimators for the gene and geneenvironment interaction effects are consistent. This suggests that we must use caution in interpreting parameters that estimate environmental main effects from a family-based case-control study if controls are selected from outside the case-ascertainment region.
Keywords
climate , mortality , heat , weather , cause of death
Journal title
American Journal of Epidemiology
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
American Journal of Epidemiology
Record number
328
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