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Increasing efficiency and reducing bias when assessing HPV vaccination efficacy by using nontargeted HPV strains.

Increasing efficiency and reducing bias when assessing HPV vaccination efficacy by using nontargeted HPV strains.

Authors :
Etievant L
Sampson JN
Gail MH
Source :
Biometrics [Biometrics] 2023 Jun; Vol. 79 (2), pp. 1534-1545. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Apr 24.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Studies of vaccine efficacy often record both the incidence of vaccine-targeted virus strains (primary outcome) and the incidence of nontargeted strains (secondary outcome). However, standard estimates of vaccine efficacy on targeted strains ignore the data on nontargeted strains. Assuming nontargeted strains are unaffected by vaccination, we regard the secondary outcome as a negative control outcome and show how using such data can (i) increase the precision of the estimated vaccine efficacy against targeted strains in randomized trials and (ii) reduce confounding bias of that same estimate in observational studies. For objective (i), we augment the primary outcome estimating equation with a function of the secondary outcome that is unbiased for zero. For objective (ii), we jointly estimate the treatment effects on the primary and secondary outcomes. If the bias induced by the unmeasured confounders is similar for both types of outcomes, as is plausible for factors that influence the general risk of infection, then we can use the estimated efficacy against the secondary outcomes to remove the bias from estimated efficacy against the primary outcome. We demonstrate the utility of these approaches in studies of HPV vaccines that only target a few highly carcinogenic strains. In this example, using nontargeted strains increased precision in randomized trials modestly but reduced bias in observational studies substantially.<br /> (© 2022 The International Biometric Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1541-0420
Volume :
79
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biometrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35347708
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/biom.13663