Case-Time-Control Design
The case-time-control design is a pharmacoepidemiologic study design that repairs a specific weakness of the case-crossover study: bias from a secular trend in exposure. In a case-crossover analysis each case acts as their own control, comparing exposure in a short hazard window just before the event to exposure in earlier reference windows, which automatically removes all fixed, time-invariant confounders. But if the prevalence of exposure is rising or falling over calendar time for reasons unrelated to the outcome, this within-person comparison is biased. Samy Suissa's 1995 design adds a separate control series, analyzed the same way, to estimate that pure time trend; dividing the case-crossover odds ratio by the control odds ratio cancels the trend and leaves the exposure effect. Sander Greenland's 1996 analysis clarified the assumptions: the correction works only if the controls share the same exposure trend and there is no within-subject confounder, and it can introduce new bias if those conditions fail.
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- Suissa, S. (1995). The case-time-control design. Epidemiology, 6(3), 248-253. · DOI 10.1097/00001648-199505000-00010
- Greenland, S. (1996). Confounding and exposure trends in case-crossover and case-time-control designs. Epidemiology, 7(3), 231-239. · DOI 10.1097/00001648-199605000-00003
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