Journal article
Adjusting for treatment effects in studies of quantitative traits: Antihypertensive therapy and systolic blood pressure
MD Tobin, NA Sheehan, KJ Scurrah, PR Burton
Statistics in Medicine | WILEY | Published : 2005
DOI: 10.1002/sim.2165
Abstract
A population-based study of a quantitative trait may be seriously compromised when the trait is subject to the effects of a treatment. For example, in a typical study of quantitative blood pressure(BP) 15 per cent or more of middle-aged subjects may take antihypertensive treatment. Without appropriate correction, this can lead to substantial shrinkage in the estimated effect of aetiological determinants of scientific interest and a marked reduction in statistical power. Correction relies upon imputation, in treated subjects, of the underlying BP from the observed BP having invoked one or more assumptions about the bioclinical setting. There is a range of different assumptions that may be mad..
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