The impact of correlated exposures and missing data on multiple informant models used to identify critical exposure windows

Author:

Bather Jemar R.1ORCID,Horton Nicholas J.2ORCID,Coull Brent A.13,Williams Paige L.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Mathematics and Statistics Amherst College Amherst Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Environmental Health Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Epidemiology Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

There has been heightened interest in identifying critical windows of exposure for adverse health outcomes; that is, time points during which exposures have the greatest impact on a person's health. Multiple informant models implemented using generalized estimating equations (MIM GEEs) have been applied to address this research question because they enable statistical comparisons of differences in associations across exposure windows. As interest rises in using MIMs, the feasibility and appropriateness of their application under settings of correlated exposures and partially missing exposure measurements requires further examination. We evaluated the impact of correlation between exposure measurements and missing exposure data on the power and differences in association estimated by the MIM GEE and an inverse probability weighted extension to account for informatively missing exposures. We assessed these operating characteristics under a variety of correlation structures, sample sizes, and missing data mechanisms considering various exposure‐outcome scenarios. We showed that applying MIM GEEs maintains higher power when there is a single critical window of exposure and exposure measures are not highly correlated, but may result in low power and bias under other settings. We applied these methods to a study of pregnant women living with HIV to explore differences in association between trimester‐specific viral load and infant neurodevelopment.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Statistics and Probability,Epidemiology

Reference51 articles.

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