Correcting for Non-Compliance Bias in Case–Control Studies to Evaluate Cancer Screening Programmes
- 1 May 2002
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series C: Applied Statistics
- Vol. 51 (2), 235-243
- https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9876.00266
Abstract
SUMMARY: In the evaluation of uncontrolled service screening programmes for cancer, the case–control design is sometimes used, in which people who die from the disease in question are compared with live controls with respect to screening histories. Such a design tends to yield estimates of relative mortality in voluntary participants compared with non-participants. This may bias results, since compliers and non-compliers may differ a priori in ways which are not related to screening but which nevertheless affect the risk of death from the disease. We present a simple method, employing external data from previously published randomized controlled trials of screening, of correction for this bias. We illustrate it by using data from a case–control study performed within the invited arm of the Malmö mammographic screening trial, a prospective study from the service screening programme in two counties in Sweden, and a matched case–control study of mammographic screening in Florence, Italy.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The impact of compliance in pharmacokinetic studiesStatistical Methods in Medical Research, 1999
- Estimating the causal effect of compliance on binary outcome in randomized controlled trialsStatistics in Medicine, 1998
- Followup after 11 years – update of mortality results in the Stockholm mammographic screening trialBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1997
- ADJUSTING FOR NON-COMPLIANCE AND CONTAMINATION IN RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIALSStatistics in Medicine, 1997
- A model-based prediction of the impact on reduction in mortality by a breast cancer screening programme in the city of Florence, ItalyEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1995
- Monitoring Interval Cancers in Breast Screening Programmes: The East Anglian ExperienceJournal of Medical Screening, 1995
- Edinburgh trial of screening for breast cancer: mortality at seven yearsThe Lancet, 1990
- Screening for breast cancer in nijmegen. report of 6 screening rounds, 1975–1986International Journal of Cancer, 1989
- Mammographic screening and mortality from breast cancer: the Malmo mammographic screening trial.BMJ, 1988
- A case‐control study of the efficacy of a non‐randomized breast cancer screening program in florence (Italy)International Journal of Cancer, 1986