Adjustment for energy intake in nutritional research: a causal inference perspective

Author:

Tomova Georgia D123ORCID,Arnold Kellyn F14ORCID,Gilthorpe Mark S123ORCID,Tennant Peter W G123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Leeds Institute for Data Analytics, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom

2. Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom

3. Alan Turing Institute, London, United Kingdom

4. Faculty of Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Four models are commonly used to adjust for energy intake when estimating the causal effect of a dietary component on an outcome: 1) the “standard model” adjusts for total energy intake, 2) the “energy partition model” adjusts for remaining energy intake, 3) the “nutrient density model” rescales the exposure as a proportion of total energy, and 4) the “residual model” indirectly adjusts for total energy by using a residual. It remains underappreciated that each approach evaluates a different estimand and only partially accounts for confounding by common dietary causes. Objectives We aimed to clarify the implied causal estimand and interpretation of each model and evaluate their performance in reducing dietary confounding. Methods Semiparametric directed acyclic graphs and Monte Carlo simulations were used to identify the estimands and interpretations implied by each model and explore their performance in the absence or presence of dietary confounding. Results The “standard model” and the mathematically identical “residual model” estimate the average relative causal effect (i.e., a “substitution” effect) but provide biased estimates even in the absence of confounding. The “energy partition model” estimates the total causal effect but only provides unbiased estimates in the absence of confounding or when all other nutrients have equal effects on the outcome. The “nutrient density model” has an obscure interpretation but attempts to estimate the average relative causal effect rescaled as a proportion of total energy. Accurate estimates of both the total and average relative causal effects may instead be derived by simultaneously adjusting for all dietary components, an approach we term the “all-components model.” Conclusions Lack of awareness of the estimand differences and accuracy of the 4 modeling approaches may explain some of the apparent heterogeneity among existing nutritional studies. This raises serious questions regarding the validity of meta-analyses where different estimands have been inappropriately pooled.

Funder

Alan Turing Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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