Inverse probability weighting for self-selection bias correction in the investigation of social inequality in mortality

Author:

Petersen Gitte Lindved123ORCID,Jørgensen Terese Sara Høj1ORCID,Mathisen Jimmi3ORCID,Osler Merete34ORCID,Mortensen Erik Lykke56,Molbo Drude1,Hougaard Charlotte Ørsted1,Lange Theis7ORCID,Lund Rikke15

Affiliation:

1. Section of Social Medicine, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen, Denmark

2. Department of Translational Type 1 Diabetes Research, Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen , Herlev, Denmark

3. Section of Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen, Denmark

4. Center for Clinical Research and Prevention, Bispebjerg & Frederiksberg Hospitals , Copenhagen, Denmark

5. Center for Healthy Aging, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen, Denmark

6. Unit of Medical Psychology, Section of Environmental Health, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen, Denmark

7. Section of Biostatistics, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Background Empirical evaluation of inverse probability weighting (IPW) for self-selection bias correction is inaccessible without the full source population. We aimed to: (i) investigate how self-selection biases frequency and association measures and (ii) assess self-selection bias correction using IPW in a cohort with register linkage. Methods The source population included 17 936 individuals invited to the Copenhagen Aging and Midlife Biobank during 2009–11 (ages 49–63 years). Participants counted 7185 (40.1%). Register data were obtained for every invited person from 7 years before invitation to the end of 2020. The association between education and mortality was estimated using Cox regression models among participants, IPW participants and the source population. Results Participants had higher socioeconomic position and fewer hospital contacts before baseline than the source population. Frequency measures of participants approached those of the source population after IPW. Compared with primary/lower secondary education, upper secondary, short tertiary, bachelor and master/doctoral were associated with reduced risk of death among participants (adjusted hazard ratio [95% CI]: 0.60 [0.46; 0.77], 0.68 [0.42; 1.11], 0.37 [0.25; 0.54], 0.28 [0.18; 0.46], respectively). IPW changed the estimates marginally (0.59 [0.45; 0.77], 0.57 [0.34; 0.93], 0.34 [0.23; 0.50], 0.24 [0.15; 0.39]) but not only towards those of the source population (0.57 [0.51; 0.64], 0.43 [0.32; 0.60], 0.38 [0.32; 0.47], 0.22 [0.16; 0.29]). Conclusions Frequency measures of study participants may not reflect the source population in the presence of self-selection, but the impact on association measures can be limited. IPW may be useful for (self-)selection bias correction, but the returned results can still reflect residual or other biases and random errors.

Funder

Center for Healthy Aging

University of Copenhagen, sponsored by the Nordea Foundation

VELUX FOUNDATION

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference30 articles.

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