Title: Modelling burdens attributable to specific diseases and causes
1Modelling burdens attributable to specific
diseases and causes
- John Powles
- Jwp11_at_cam.ac.uk
2Nature of causation in epidemiology
most common
3Necessary, sufficient and component causes of
disease (Rothman)
A is a necessary cause
4Population attributable fraction (risk) or burden
- For a dichotomous (harmful) exposure
- Proportion that would not have occurred with zero
exposure - But
- Needs also to be generalised to continuous
exposures (eg adiposity, bp) - And
- To preventive exposures eg Physical activity
5Population attributable fraction (risk) or burden
- Generalising to continuous exposures
- attributable burden
- difference between burden currently observed and
what would have been observed under a (past)
counterfactual exposure distribution
6Generalising to preventive exposures
- For a dichotomous protective exposure
- Proportion of the cases that would have occurred
in the absence of exposure that were prevented by
the exposure - Note denominator is the hypothetical total
applying in the unprotected counterfactual - EG for moderate alcohol drinking and IHD
- Prevented fraction Prevented cases
/Total expected in counter-
factual non-drinking
population
7Generalising to preventive exposures
- Generalising to continuous exposures
- prevented burden
- difference between burden currently observed and
what would have been observed under a (past)
counterfactual exposure distribution
8Avoidable burden
- More relevant to current policy are the potential
future benefits of deciding to do something now
9Avoidable burden
- Reduction in future burden expected if current
exposure changed to a specified (more favourable)
counterfactual exposure
10Counterfactual exposure distributions
- Theoretical minimum risk
- Plausible minimum risk
- Feasible minimum risk
- Cost-effective minimum risk
11(No Transcript)
12Counterfactual exposure distributions
- Theoretical minimum risk
- Eg Tobacco zero smoking
- Alcohol 1-2 drinks/d for 100 of middle-
aged and
older - ? Such distributions often implausible for
public health purposes
13Counterfactual exposure distributions
- Plausible minimum risk
- Ie Possible to imagine a society with such a
distribution of risk - Eg Tobacco smoking limited to a very small
minority - Alcohol a distribution with (say) 70
drinking up to 1.5 d/d 15 abstainers
14Counterfactual exposure distributions
- Feasible minimum risk
- Ie a distribution of risk that has been actually
been attained by some society - Eg Tobacco (once adopted) 80 non-smokers
- Alcohol a distribution with 55
drinking up to 1.5 d/d 20 abstainers
15Counterfactural exposure distributions feasible
minimum risk
16Counterfactual exposure distributions
- Cost-effective minimum risk
- Ie A distribution of risk after a specified
economically and politically feasible control
programme - Eg Tobacco and alcohol based on overviews of
effectiveness of policies including tax and
legislative measures -
17Attributable burdens are unbounded (ie not
constrained to add to 100)
- Eg Asbestos exposure smoking as causes of lung
cancer in asbestos workers
From Hammond et al, 1979
18Implications of unbounded nature of the sum of
attributable/avoidable burdens
- Plausibility is only constraint
- All such claims should be interpreted
appropriately and cautiously
19Attributable burden for a determinant
- AB S AFjBj
- Where
- AFj is the attributable fraction for condition j
from the determinant of interest and Bj is the
burden from condition j
20The potential impact fraction (PIF) for a
stratified exposure
- For m exposure strata, where
- P and P are proportions in a given exposure
stratum actually and counterfactually - R is the RR for the given exposure stratum
Kleinbaum et al, 1982
21Scan of murray and lopez 1999 p 599
22For scan of murray and lopez 1999 p 596