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The impact of record-linkage bias in the Cox model
Authors:Ileana Baldi MSc  Antonio Ponti MD  Roberto Zanetti MD  Giovannino Ciccone MD PhD  Franco Merletti MD  and Dario Gregori PhD
Institution:Researcher, Unit of Cancer Epidemiology, C.P.O. Piemonte and University of Torino, Torino, Italy;
Epidemiologist, Unit of Epidemiology, C.P.O. Piemonte, Torino, Italy;
Director of Piedmont Cancer Registry, C.P.O. Piemonte, Torino, Italy;
Chief of Clinical Epidemiology Section, Unit of Cancer Epidemiology, C.P.O. Piemonte and University of Torino, Torino, Italy;
Full Professor of Medical Statistics, Unit of Cancer Epidemiology, C.P.O. Piemonte and University of Torino, Torino, Italy;
Associate Professor of Medical Statistics, Department of Public Health and Microbiology, University of Torino, Torino, Italy
Abstract:Rationale, aims and objectives  Record linkage (RL) has become increasingly useful in health care administration, demographic studies, provision of health statistics and medical research. Linkage failure may occur when databases are affected by missing or inaccurate information. In particular, if the subsets of those who are not linked are not representative of the original population, the results obtained from linked data may be biased. This paper discusses the impact of incomplete RL on survival analysis.
Methods  In our study we assess by simulations the potential impact of such bias, that we will refer to as RL, on the effect of the covariates in the Cox regression model. We also evaluate the RL bias introduced by an incomplete linkage procedure on the analysis of survival in a cohort of patients with breast cancer.
Results  Our simulation study shows that the relative bias of the factors, which the linking probability depends on, reaches the threshold of 20%, and is never less than 5%. The bias observed in the simulation for a comparable scenario is consistent with the actual one estimated from the breast cancer records.
Conclusions  Incomplete RL is rarely explicitly taken into account in the models for survival analysis. This study indicates that such a practice is potentially leading to inefficient and biased results, in particular in presence of medium or small sample sizes.
Keywords:breast cancer  Cox model  estimation bias  proportional hazard  record-linkage
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