Many studies in public health, including comparative effectiveness research, aim to answer questions such as what works for whom? or under what conditions does it work? Such questions can often only be answered in the context of a non-experimental study. Propensity scores are a key statistical tool for non-experimental studies because they facilitate the comparison of apples with apples. However, many non-experimental studies require combining information from multiple data sets, which may have slightly different measures available. Examples include depression measured using two different scales, or direct- versus parent-reported measures of behavior among children with autism. Existing propensity score methods cannot handle situations where the covariates are measured with error or are measured differently across treatment and comparison groups. This is a particular challenge in mental health research, where many of the disorders and factors under study are not directly observable and are instead modeled as latent constructs. This project will develop and assess new statistical methods for estimating treatment effects in non-experimental studies when the covariates are measured with error or are measured in different ways across the treatment and comparison groups. The work will tie together propensity score methods for estimating treatment effects, latent variable methods, and multiple imputation methods for handling missing data.
The aims are: 1) Investigate the implications of measurement error in the covariates when using propensity score methods to estimate treatment effects, 2) Develop and assess propensity score methods for settings where some of the covariates are measured with error or are measured differently in the treatment and comparison groups, and 3) Use the results and methods from Aims 1 and 2 to estimate treatment effects in three studies, each comparing a group receiving the intervention to an external comparison group, and then test the methods by comparing those estimates to the reported treatment effects from randomized trials of the same interventions. The methods will be examined in the context of three studies in mental health evaluating the effectiveness of (1) early intervention for children with autism, (2) perinatal depression prevention, and (3) the use of ginkgo biloba to prevent dementia and Alzheimer's disease.

Public Health Relevance

Many important questions regarding the effects of policies, treatments, or interventions in public health can only be answered using non-experimental methods due to ethical or feasibility concerns with randomized controlled trials. New statistical methods are needed to allow researchers to take full advantage of existing data to estimate treatment effects in non- experimental studies.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01MH099010-03
Application #
8850903
Study Section
Mental Health Services Research Committee (SERV)
Program Officer
Rupp, Agnes
Project Start
2013-07-01
Project End
2016-03-31
Budget Start
2015-07-01
Budget End
2016-03-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Other Health Professions
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21205
Lenis, David; Ackerman, Benjamin; Stuart, Elizabeth A (2018) Measuring Model Misspecification: Application to Propensity Score Methods with Complex Survey Data. Comput Stat Data Anal 128:48-57
Rudolph, Kara E; Stuart, Elizabeth A (2018) Using Sensitivity Analyses for Unobserved Confounding to Address Covariate Measurement Error in Propensity Score Methods. Am J Epidemiol 187:604-613
Austin, Peter C; Stuart, Elizabeth A (2017) Estimating the effect of treatment on binary outcomes using full matching on the propensity score. Stat Methods Med Res 26:2505-2525
Lenis, David; Ebnesajjad, Cyrus F; Stuart, Elizabeth A (2017) A doubly robust estimator for the average treatment effect in the context of a mean-reverting measurement error. Biostatistics 18:325-337
Webb-Vargas, Yenny; Rudolph, Kara E; Lenis, David et al. (2017) An imputation-based solution to using mismeasured covariates in propensity score analysis. Stat Methods Med Res 26:1824-1837
Austin, Peter C; Stuart, Elizabeth A (2017) The performance of inverse probability of treatment weighting and full matching on the propensity score in the presence of model misspecification when estimating the effect of treatment on survival outcomes. Stat Methods Med Res 26:1654-1670
Jackson, John W; Schmid, Ian; Stuart, Elizabeth A (2017) Propensity Scores in Pharmacoepidemiology: Beyond the Horizon. Curr Epidemiol Rep 4:271-280
Hong, Hwanhee; Rudolph, Kara E; Stuart, Elizabeth A (2017) Bayesian Approach for Addressing Differential Covariate Measurement Error in Propensity Score Methods. Psychometrika 82:1078-1096
Colson, K Ellicott; Rudolph, Kara E; Zimmerman, Scott C et al. (2016) Optimizing matching and analysis combinations for estimating causal effects. Sci Rep 6:23222
George, Brandon J; Beasley, T Mark; Brown, Andrew W et al. (2016) Common scientific and statistical errors in obesity research. Obesity (Silver Spring) 24:781-90

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