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Measures of disease occurrence and frequency

Measures of disease occurrence and frequency. Epidemiology matters: a new introduction to methodological foundations Chapter 5. Seven steps. Define the population of interest Conceptualize and create measures of exposures and health indicators Take a sample of the population

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Measures of disease occurrence and frequency

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  1. Measures of disease occurrence and frequency Epidemiology matters: a new introduction to methodological foundations Chapter 5

  2. Seven steps • Define the population of interest • Conceptualize and create measures of exposures and health indicators • Take a sample of the population • Estimate measures of association between exposures and health indicators of interest • Rigorously evaluate whether the association observed suggests a causal association • Assess the evidence for causes working together • Assess the extent to which the result matters, is externally valid, to other populations Epidemiology Matters – Chapter 1

  3. Seven measure of disease occurrence and frequency • Counts • Prevalence • Incidence/risk • Mean/variance • Median • Mode • Rates Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  4. Tuberculosis in New York City • Tuberculosis is a reportable condition • All diagnosed cases must be reported to the department of health • In 2011, there were 689 new cases of tuberculosis in New York City Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  5. Tuberculosis in New York City • Tuberculosis is a reportable condition • All diagnosed cases must be reported to the department of health • In 2011, there were 689 new cases of tuberculosis in New York City Is this information useful? Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  6. 1. Counts • Provide an absolute number of the burden of disease • However counts has limited utility for two reasons • The burden of disease in the population is very different if the population size is 100,000 versus 1,000,000 • Some people are not at risk for developing a new onset of tuberculosis in 2011 (due to pre-existing infection), thus we need to know not only the size of the total population, but the size of the total population at risk Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  7. Incidence and prevalence • Two measures overcome many of the limitations of a simple count of cases - incidence and prevalence • Prevalencetells us about the proportion of cases among the total population at any given time • Incidencetells us the probability of a new onset of disease among those at risk for developing the illness Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  8. 2. Prevalence The proportion of people who have the disease (existing cases plus new cases) over the total population for a given time period Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  9. Disease occurrence in a sample of Farrlandia over time Year 1, 5 individuals developed the outcome Year 2, an additional 7 people developed the outcome Year 3, an additional 4 people developed the outcome

  10. What is the prevalence of disease in Year 2? • What is the numerator? 5 cases in Year 1 + 7 cases in Year 2 = 12 • What is the denominator? Total sample size = 30 • Prevalence = 12/30 = 0.4 The prevalence of disease in Year 2 is 40% Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  11. What is the prevalence of disease in Year 3? • What is the numerator? 5 cases in Year 1 + 7 cases in Year 2 + 4 cases in Year 3 = 16 • What is the denominator? Total sample size = 30 • Prevalence = 16/30 = 0.533 • The prevalence of disease in Year 2 is 53.3% Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  12. Summary: Prevalence • For prevalence, we need a numerator (number of existing cases), and denominator (total sample size), and a time period of interest • The time period should be specified as much as possible • For example, when we say “in Year 2” we mean over the duration of time that spanned up to Year 2 Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  13. 3. Incidence • Perhaps the most widely used tool in epidemiology • Goes by many names - most common alternative name is “risk,” and less commonly, “incidence proportion” • Numerator= number of new cases • Denominator= population at risk of becoming a new case • Specified over a specific time period Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  14. What is the incidence of disease in Year 2? • What is the numerator? 7 new cases in Year 2 • What is the denominator? 25 people at risk (5 people already developed the disease in Year 1 and are thus not at risk) • Incidence = 7/25 = 0.28 The incidence (risk) of disease in Year 2 is 28% Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  15. What is the incidence of disease in Years 2 and 3? • What is the numerator? 7 new cases in Year 2 + 4 new cases in Year 3 = 11 • What is the denominator? • 25 people at risk (5 people already developed the disease in Year 1 and are thus not at risk) • Incidence = 11/25 = 0.44 The incidence (risk) of disease in Years 2 and 3 is 44% Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  16. Summary: Incidence • For incidence, we need a numerator (number of new cases), and denominator (total sample size at risk), and a time period of interest • The time period should again be specified as much as possible Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  17. The relation between incidence and prevalence • For incidence, we need a numerator (number of new cases), and denominator (total sample size at risk), and a time period of interest • The time period should again be specified as much as possible Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  18. Understanding incidence and prevalence: the bathtub example Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  19. Examples of the relation between incidence and prevalence • High incidence, steady prevalence • Example: highly contagious infectious disease with very short duration or a high case-fatality • Low incidence, high prevalence • Examples: diseases with long duration such as arthritis, diabetes, Crohn’s disease, and other chronic illnesses Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  20. Examples of the relation between incidence and prevalence Impact of a new treatment that prolongs life with the disease but does not cure it People Living with HIV New HIV Infections Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  21. Summary, incidence, prevalence • Prevalence is affected by incidenceand duration • If a disease has short duration, • Prevalence ~= incidence* • If a disease has long duration, in general, • Prevalence > incidence * Assumes that incidence is constant over time Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  22. Mean, variance, median, mode • Health outcomes are sometimes not measured by presence or absence, but rather as a continuous measure • Examples: Body Mass Index, blood pressure, cholesterol, birth weight, lung function, number of depression or anxiety symptoms • In these cases, we need measures of centrality and spread to characterize occurrence and frequency Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  23. Mean • The mean is estimated by summing the outcomes for each individual and dividing that summed score by the number of individuals • For example, suppose we measured BMI in a sample of 31 individuals Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  24. Mean Table: Body mass index (BMI) in a random sample of 31 Farrlandians Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  25. Mean The mean is estimated by summing the outcomes for each individual and dividing that summed score by the number of individuals = 31.1 Thus, the mean BMI in our sample is 31.1 Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  26. Variance • In addition to estimating the mean of a continuous variable, it is important to estimate how close all of the individual values are to that mean • For example, suppose we sampled two populations, and obtained the following histograms of their risk of disease Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  27. The values of BMI in Sample 2 are closer to the mean than in Sample 1 Therefore, Sample 2 has a lower variance than Sample 1 Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  28. Variance • The spread of individual values around the mean is a measure of the variance of the data • The size of the variance gives us important information about the distribution of the variable of interest within the sample • A large variance tells us that while the mean may be 31.1, there is a wide range of total values across the whole sample (and, if a representative sample, underlying population) • A small variance tells us that there is little variability in the sample (and, if a representative sample, underlying population) with respect to the variable of interest Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  29. Mean and variance: limitations • The mean can be influenced by extremes in the data • If our data had one recorded miscoded as a BMI of 550 instead of 55, the mean would be 47.1 rather than 31.1 • In general, when the outcomes are not evenly distributed across a full range of potential values and instead are aggregated at the low end or the high end, the mean may not be the most informative measure of centrality • For example, suppose we would like to measure the mean number of cigarettes smoked per day among a sample of adolescents Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  30. Mean and variance: limitations Table: Number of cigarettes smoked per day among a random sample of 17 adolescents Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  31. Mean and variance: limitations • The mean would be 9.24 • However most of the values are between 1 and 3, thus reporting an average of 9.24 cigarettes smoked in the sample is not very informative Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  32. 5. Median The median of a variable is the numerical value that falls in the exact middle of the range of values; it is the value for which 50% of the remaining values are above and 50% are below Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  33. Median 1 1 3 4 7 9 • There are six observations in this set, so that there is no single value that falls directly in the middle • In this case, we take the mean of the two values most centered. Since 3 and 4 are the most centered values (2 observations fall below, and 2 observations fall above), the median of this set is the mean of 3 and 4: (3+4)/2=3.5 3 5 7 The median value is 5 3 3 5 7 9 9 11 The median value of this variable is 7 Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  34. Median • Considering our smoking variable, the median value would be 2 • There are eight observations that fall below 2 in this string of values, and eight that fall above 2 Thus, whereas the mean number of cigarettes smoked was 9.24, the median was 2 • This signals that the distribution is quite skewed by a few heavy smokers Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  35. 6. Mode • One simple measure of centrality is the most frequently observed value, which is labeled the mode • Returning to our example of cigarette smoking, we can determine the following: • 3 students reported smoking 1 cigarette per day • 6 students reported 2 cigarettes per day • 4 reported 3 cigarettes per day • 1 student reported 10 per day • 1 student reported 20 per day • 1 student reported 40 per day • 1 reported 60 per day • The modal value is the value that is most frequent; given that 6 students reported 2 cigarettes per day, the modal value would be 2 Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  36. 7. Incidence rates • We have learned that “incidence” or “risk” is calculated as the number of new cases over the population at risk of becoming a new case • Incidence is an accurate representation of a sample experience of health and disease when we have complete follow-up of a sample • That is, each individual is observed at every measurement time point from the beginning of the study to the end Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  37. Example: alcohol consumption and liver cirrhosis • Suppose we conduct a study to estimate the association between heavy alcohol consumption and liver cirrhosis • We follow 20 people over time • 10 are heavy alcohol consumers • First, let us imagine that we had complete follow-up data on all people in the study Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  38. Disease incidence over time by population exposure Incidence over four time points = 0.65 or 65% 13/20 = Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  39. Example: alcohol consumption and liver cirrhosis • Now, let us imagine that we lost some people over time • Thus, we do not know whether these individuals became diseased or not Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  40. Loss to follow up in a sample over time Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  41. Incidence when there is loss to follow-up • We know that the true incidence is 65% • If we only analyzed the data based on who was present at the end of the study, we would estimate incidence as9/15 = 0.60 or 60% • If we assumed that individuals who dropped out did not become diseased we would get9/20 = 0.45 or 45% • If we assumed that individuals who dropped out did become diseased we would get14/20 = 0.70 or 70% • There is one more option:a rate Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  42. Incidence rates • Incidence rates are commonly used in prospective studies in which some people are lost over time • To estimate a rate over the time frame of the study, we need to know how much total time each person contributed to the study follow-up before they either developed the outcome or dropped out • We term the total time that each person contributed as person-time Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  43. Understanding person years Person 2 stayed in the study all 40 years and did not develop the outcome Person 10 dropped out of the study at Year 30 Person 19 developed the outcome at Year 10 Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  44. Understanding person years Table: Person-time and disease status among 20 subjects followed for forty years Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  45. Calculating the incidence rate • The numerator is the number of cases • The denominator is the total person-time • In our example: 8/440 = 0.18, or a rate of 18 cases per 1,000 person-years Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  46. Calculating the incidence rate • The incidence rate can be interpreted as the number of expected cases in every set of 1,000 person years • That is, if we were to observe 1,000 people for 1 year, we would expect 18 cases • If we were to observe 500 people for 2 years, we would still expect 18 cases • The assumption underlying this is that the incidence rate is constant over time, so for every year in which 1,000 person years are observed an additional 18 cases will be expected • Given this assumption, the incidence rate tells us the average number of cases per a specified set of person time Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  47. Rate versus proportion: what’s the difference? • A proportion can range from 0 to 100, and the numerator is contained in the denominator • A rate can range from 0 to infinity and the numerator is the number of cases whereas the denominator is the person-time at risk • Incidence rates can be conceptualized as the speed at which disease is occurring in cases per person year • When we have complete follow-up of a sample or a population, the rate can approximate the proportion of disease or the risk Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  48. Risks and rates, an example, part 1 • We have 10 people who are disease free at the start of follow-up, each followed for 1 year • Three of these individuals develop the disease. • All individuals are followed for the entirety of the study period • The risk (incidence) ofdisease will be 3 out of 10, or 0.3 • Assuming these individuals developed the disease just as the year was ending, and the ratewould be 3 per 10 person years or 0.3 (equivalent to the risk) Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  49. Rate versus proportion, an example, part 2 • Now suppose that those who developed the disease did so halfway through the year • 7 people were followed and did not develop the disease, i.e., 1 person year for each totaling 7 person years • 3 people developed the disease, i.e., we assign each of them 0.5 person years for the midpoint of the time interval for a total of 1.5 person years • Thus, the incidence rate would be 3 per 8.5 person years, or 0.35 Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

  50. Incidence vs. incidence rate: what’s the difference? • Because measures of incidence are so central to epidemiological investigation, the term “incidence” can be used in various contexts, and the concept that we refer to as “incidence” can go by different terms • The incidence refers to the number of new cases divided by the population at risk. It is also called the incidence proportion, or the risk • When we refer to “incidence”, we mean the incidence proportion, also known as the risk • The incidence rate refers to the number of new cases divided by the person-time at risk contributed by members of the study • When we refer to “incidence rate”, we specifically refer to a measure in which the denominator is the person-time at risk contributed by members of the study. Epidemiology matters - Chapter 5

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