Mediational g-formula for time-varying treatment and repeated-measured multiple mediators: Application to atorvastatin’s effect on cardiovascular disease via cholesterol lowering and anti-inflammatory actions in elderly type 2 diabetics

Author:

Yamamuro Shintaro12,Shinozaki Tomohiro3ORCID,Iimuro Satoshi4,Matsuyama Yutaka1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

2. Department of Clinical Data Science, Eisai Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan

3. Department of Information and Computer Technology, Faculty of Engineering, Tokyo University of Science, Tokyo University of Science, Tokyo, Japan

4. Innovation and Research Support Center, Graduate School of Medicine, International University of Health and Welfare, International University of Health and Welfare, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Modern causal mediation theory has formalized several types of indirect and direct effects of treatment on outcomes regarding specific mediator variables. We reviewed and unified distinct approaches to estimate the “interventional” direct and indirect effects for multiple mediators and time-varying variables. This study was motivated by a clinical trial of elderly type-2 diabetic patients in which atorvastatin was widely prescribed to control patients’ cholesterol levels to reduce diabetic complications, including cardiovascular disease. Among atorvastatin’s preventive side-effects (pleiotropic effects), we focus on its anti-inflammatory action as measured by white blood cell counts. Hence, we estimate atorvastatin’s interventional indirect effects through cholesterol lowering and through anti-inflammatory action, and interventional direct effect bypassing these two actions. In our analysis, total effect (six-year cardiovascular disease risk difference) estimated by standard plug-in g-formula of −3.65% (95% confidence interval: −10.29%, 4.38%) is decomposed into indirect effect via low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (−0.90% [−1.91%, −0.07%]), via white blood cell counts (−0.03% [−0.22%, 0.11%]), and direct effect (−2.84% [−9.71%, 5.41%]) by the proposed parametric mediational g-formula. The SAS program and its evaluation via simulated datasets are provided in the Supplemental materials.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare

Japan Foundation for Aging and Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Statistics and Probability,Epidemiology

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