JMIR Formative Research (Jan 2025)

Methods to Adjust for Confounding in Test-Negative Design COVID-19 Effectiveness Studies: Simulation Study

  • Elizabeth AK Rowley,
  • Patrick K Mitchell,
  • Duck-Hye Yang,
  • Ned Lewis,
  • Brian E Dixon,
  • Gabriela Vazquez-Benitez,
  • William F Fadel,
  • Inih J Essien,
  • Allison L Naleway,
  • Edward Stenehjem,
  • Toan C Ong,
  • Manjusha Gaglani,
  • Karthik Natarajan,
  • Peter Embi,
  • Ryan E Wiegand,
  • Ruth Link-Gelles,
  • Mark W Tenforde,
  • Bruce Fireman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/58981
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. e58981

Abstract

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BackgroundReal-world COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness (VE) studies are investigating exposures of increasing complexity accounting for time since vaccination. These studies require methods that adjust for the confounding that arises when morbidities and demographics are associated with vaccination and the risk of outcome events. Methods based on propensity scores (PS) are well-suited to this when the exposure is dichotomous, but present challenges when the exposure is multinomial. ObjectiveThis simulation study aimed to investigate alternative methods to adjust for confounding in VE studies that have a test-negative design. MethodsAdjustment for a disease risk score (DRS) is compared with multivariable logistic regression. Both stratification on the DRS and direct covariate adjustment of the DRS are examined. Multivariable logistic regression with all the covariates and with a limited subset of key covariates is considered. The performance of VE estimators is evaluated across a multinomial vaccination exposure in simulated datasets. ResultsBias in VE estimates from multivariable models ranged from –5.3% to 6.1% across 4 levels of vaccination. Standard errors of VE estimates were unbiased, and 95% coverage probabilities were attained in most scenarios. The lowest coverage in the multivariable scenarios was 93.7% (95% CI 92.2%-95.2%) and occurred in the multivariable model with key covariates, while the highest coverage in the multivariable scenarios was 95.3% (95% CI 94.0%-96.6%) and occurred in the multivariable model with all covariates. Bias in VE estimates from DRS-adjusted models was low, ranging from –2.2% to 4.2%. However, the DRS-adjusted models underestimated the standard errors of VE estimates, with coverage sometimes below the 95% level. The lowest coverage in the DRS scenarios was 87.8% (95% CI 85.8%-89.8%) and occurred in the direct adjustment for the DRS model. The highest coverage in the DRS scenarios was 94.8% (95% CI 93.4%-96.2%) and occurred in the model that stratified on DRS. Although variation in the performance of VE estimates occurred across modeling strategies, variation in performance was also present across exposure groups. ConclusionsOverall, models using a DRS to adjust for confounding performed adequately but not as well as the multivariable models that adjusted for covariates individually.