September 2022 Estimation of the marginal effect of antidepressants on body mass index under confounding and endogenous covariate-driven monitoring times
Janie Coulombe, Erica E. M. Moodie, Robert W. Platt, Christel Renoux
Author Affiliations +
Ann. Appl. Stat. 16(3): 1868-1890 (September 2022). DOI: 10.1214/21-AOAS1570

Abstract

In studying the marginal effect of antidepressants on body mass index using electronic health records data, we face several challenges. Patients’ characteristics can affect the exposure (confounding) as well as the timing of routine visits (measurement process), and those characteristics may be altered following a visit which can create dependencies between the monitoring and body mass index when viewed as a stochastic or random processes in time. This may result in a form of selection bias that distorts the estimation of the marginal effect of the antidepressant. Inverse intensity of visit weights have been proposed to adjust for these imbalances, however no approaches have addressed complex settings where the covariate and the monitoring processes affect each other in time so as to induce endogeneity, a situation likely to occur in electronic health records. We review how selection bias due to outcome-dependent follow-up times may arise and propose a new cumulated weight that models a complete monitoring path so as to address the above-mentioned challenges and produce a reliable estimate of the impact of antidepressants on body mass index. More specifically, we do so using data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink in the United Kingdom, comparing the marginal effect of two commonly used antidepressants, citalopram and fluoxetine, on body mass index. The results are compared to those obtained with simpler methods that do not account for the extent of the dependence due to an endogenous covariate process.

Funding Statement

This research was enabled in part by support provided by Compute Canada. Computations were performed on the Niagara supercomputer at the SciNet HPC Consortium. SciNet is funded by the Canada Foundation for Innovation; the Government of Ontario; Ontario Research Fund - Research Excellence; and the University of Toronto.
This work is supported by a doctoral scholarship from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada (Ref. 401223940) to author JC.
EEMM acknowledges support from a Discovery Grant from NSERC and a chercheur de mérite career award from the Fonds de recherche du Québec–Santé. EEMM holds a Canada Research Chair.
RWP acknowledges support from a Discovery Grant from NSERC and a Foundation Scheme Grant from CIHR.
CR acknowledges support from a chercheur-boursier salary award from the Fonds de recherche du Québec-Santé.

Acknowledgments

We thank the Editor, Associate Editor and the reviewer who provided constructive feedback on our work, for greatly improving the manuscript.

Citation

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Janie Coulombe. Erica E. M. Moodie. Robert W. Platt. Christel Renoux. "Estimation of the marginal effect of antidepressants on body mass index under confounding and endogenous covariate-driven monitoring times." Ann. Appl. Stat. 16 (3) 1868 - 1890, September 2022. https://doi.org/10.1214/21-AOAS1570

Information

Received: 1 February 2021; Revised: 1 October 2021; Published: September 2022
First available in Project Euclid: 19 July 2022

MathSciNet: MR4455903
zbMATH: 1498.62203
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1214/21-AOAS1570

Keywords: Body mass index , Causal inference , citalopram , electronic health records , fluoxetine , outcome-dependent follow-up times

Rights: Copyright © 2022 Institute of Mathematical Statistics

Vol.16 • No. 3 • September 2022
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