Causal mediation analysis with mediator values below an assay limit

Author:

Chernofsky Ariel1ORCID,Bosch Ronald J.2,Lok Judith J.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics Boston University Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Center for Biostatistics in AIDS Research Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Mathematics and Statistics Boston University Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

Causal indirect and direct effects provide an interpretable method for decomposing the total effect of an exposure on an outcome into the indirect effect through a mediator and the direct effect through all other pathways. A natural choice for a mediator in a randomized clinical trial is the treatment's targeted biomarker. However, when the mediator is a biomarker, values can be subject to an assay lower limit. The mediator is affected by the treatment and is a putative cause of the outcome, so the assay lower limit presents a compounded problem in mediation analysis. We propose two approaches to estimate indirect and direct effects with a mediator subject to an assay limit: (1) extrapolation and (2) numerical optimization and integration of the observed likelihood. Since these estimation methods solely rely on the so‐called Mediation Formula, they apply to most approaches to causal mediation analysis: natural, separable, and organic indirect, and direct effects. A simulation study compares the two estimation approaches to imputing with half the assay limit. Using HIV interruption study data from the AIDS Clinical Trials Group described in Li et al 2016, AIDS; Lok and Bosch 2021, Epidemiology, we illustrate our methods by estimating the organic/pure indirect effect of a hypothetical HIV curative treatment on viral suppression mediated by two HIV persistence measures: cell‐associated HIV‐RNA and single‐copy plasma HIV‐RNA.

Funder

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing, National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Reference23 articles.

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4. PearlJ.Direct and indirect effects. Paper presented at: Proceedings of UAI‐01 San Francisco CA.2001:411‐420.

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