Longitudinal drop-out and weighting against its bias

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Interventionsabbrüche und die Faktorengewichtung im Verhältnis zur -verzerrung in Langzeitstudien
Autor:Schmidt, Steffen Christian Ekkehard; Woll, Alexander
Erschienen in:BMC medical research methodology
Veröffentlicht:17 (2017), Art.-ID 164, [11 S.], Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Elektronische Ressource (online)
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:1471-2288
DOI:10.1186/s12874-017-0446-x
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Erfassungsnummer:PU202008006517
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

Background
The bias caused by drop-out is an important factor in large population-based epidemiological studies. Many studies account for it by weighting their longitudinal data, but to date there is no detailed final approach for how to conduct these weights.
Methods
In this study we describe the observed longitudinal bias and a three-step longitudinal weighting approach used for the longitudinal data in the MoMo baseline (N = 4528, 4–17 years) and wave 1 study with 2807 (62%) participants between 2003 and 2012.
Results
The most meaningful drop-out predictors were socioeconomic status of the household, socioeconomic characteristics of the mother and daily TV usage. Weighting reduced the bias between the longitudinal participants and the baseline sample, and also increased variance by 5% to 35% with a final weighting efficiency of 41.67%.
Conclusions
We conclude that a weighting procedure is important to reduce longitudinal bias in health-oriented epidemiological studies and suggest identifying the most influencing variables in the first step, then use logistic regression modeling to calculate the inverse of the probability of participation in the second step, and finally trim and standardize the weights in the third step.