Background: The randomized controlled study is the gold-standard research method in biomedicine. In contrast, the validity of a (nonrandomized) observational study is often questioned because of unknown/unmeasured factors, which may have confounding and/or effect-modifying potential. Methods. In this paper, the author proposes a perturbation test to detect the bias of unmeasured factors and a perturbation adjustment to correct for such bias. The proposed method circumvents the problem of measuring unknowns by collecting the perturbations of unmeasured factors instead. Specifically, a perturbation is a variable that is readily available (or can be measured easily) and is potentially associated, though perhaps only very weakly, with unmeasured factors. The author conducted extensive computer simulations to provide a proof of concept. Results: Computer simulations show that, as the number of perturbation variables increases from data mining, the power of the perturbation test increased progressively, up to nearly 100%. In addition, after the perturbation adjustment, the bias decreased progressively, down to nearly 0%. Conclusions: The data-mining perturbation analysis described here is recommended for use in detecting and correcting the bias of unmeasured factors in observational studies. © 2014 Lee; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Lee, W. C. (2014). Detecting and correcting the bias of unmeasured factors using perturbation analysis: A data-mining approach. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-14-18