Title: Causation
1Causation
- Learning Objectives
- To be able to discuss Different Theories of
causation - Causation in Infectious vs. Chronic Disease
- Modern view of causation
2- Jay M. Fleisher MS, Ph.D.
- Associate Professor, Nova Southeastern University
- Studied at
- Columbia University School of Public Health MS
Epidemiology - NYU Ph.D. Environmental Epidemiology/Biostat
istics
3Causation
- Two types of medical research
- Bench work
- Epidemiology
- Bench work usually describes the underlying
biology of disease - Epidemiology either tests the results of bench
work on human populations or provides input to
the biomedical scientist on what we still do not
know
4What does the term Causal really mean?
5Example 1 - HIV and AIDS
- Epidemiology identifies new disease caused by
defect in immune system - Bench science identifies the infectious agent
- Epidemiological studies confirm that agent causes
disease in humans - Causation is proven
6Example 2 - What Causes an MI
- Epidemiological studies combined with laboratory
study identify risk factors - Cigarette smoking
- Cholesterol
- Elevated blood pressure
- Stress
- Family history
- Obesity
- Etc
- Which of the above contribute the most risk
- What are the relationships between risk factors
7Therefore
- The issue of causation is not as simple as it
first appears - Thus, the need for a unifying concept of causation
8A Unifying Model of Causal Relationships
9The 2 Components
- Sufficient Cause
- precedes the disease
- if the cause is present, the disease always
occurs - Necessary Cause
- precedes the disease
- if the cause is absent, the disease cannot occur
10The 4 Models of Causal Relationships
111. Necessary and Sufficient
Disease
Only Factor A
Sickle Cell Anemia
Genetic factors
RARELY OCCUR
122. Necessary but Not Sufficient
Factor A
Factor B
Disease
Factor C
132. Necessary but Not Sufficient - Example
Initiation
Latent Period
Cancer
Promoter
143. Sufficient but Not Necessary
Factor A
Factor B
Disease
Factor C
153. Sufficient but Not Necessary - Example
Ionizing Radiation
or
Benzene
Leukemia
or
Electromagnetic Fields?
164. Neither Sufficient Nor Necessary
Factor A
Factor B
and/or
Disease
Factor C
Factor D
and/or
Factor E
Factor F
174. Neither Sufficient Nor Necessary - Example
Smoking
Cholesterol
and/or
MI
HBP
Fam. History
and/or
Stress
Obesity
18Therefore
- Concept of Necessary vs. Sufficient Causes
provides a theoretical framework for causation of
all disease - How do we actually assess whether a Risk Factor
is indeed Causal
19Criteria for Assessing Causation
- Temporal relationship
- Exposure precedes the disease
- Strength of the Association
- Measured by the Relative Risk ( either the Rate
Ratio or the Odds Ratio) - Dose-response Relationship
- As the dose of exposure increases the risk of
disease also increases - Example Cigarette Smoking and Lung Ca
- Replication of the Findings
- Results replicated in other studies
- Biologic plausibility
- Does the association fit with what we know about
the underlying biology - Sometimes we know little or nothing about the
undelieing biology ( Black Box epidemiology - Consistency
- Alternative explanation eliminated
20Criteria for Assessing Causation
- Biologic plausibility
- Does the association fit with what we know about
the underlying biology - Sometimes we know little or nothing about the
underlying biology ( Black Box
epidemiology) - Example Asbestosis and Lung Ca.. Only have
theory of mechanism - Consideration of Alternate Explanations
- If knowledge exists, rule out or make sure
studies took into account - Cessation of Exposure
- If exposure is reduced or eliminated Risk will
decline - Example Ex-Smokers
- Specificity of the Association
- A specific agent is associated with only 1
disease - OK for infectious agents but falls apart with
many Risk Factors for Chronic Illness - Example Cigarette Smoking associated with
several diseases
21Relevant Web Sites
- http//www.defendingscience.org/sites/default/file
s/upload/Rothman-Greenland.pdf - http//www.facmed.unam.mx/deptos/salud/censenanza/
spiii/spiii/rothman.pdf