Abstract

Multiple imputation by chained equations (MICE) has emerged as a leading strategy for imputing missing epidemiological data due to its ease of implementation and ability to maintain unbiased effect estimates and valid inference. Within the MICE algorithm, imputation can be performed using a variety of parametric or nonparametric methods. Literature has suggested that nonparametric tree-based imputation methods outperform parametric methods in terms of bias and coverage when there are interactions or other nonlinear effects among the variables. However, these studies fail to provide a fair comparison as they do not follow the well-established recommendation that any effects in the final analysis model (including interactions) should be included in the parametric imputation model. We show via simulation that properly incorporating interactions in the parametric imputation model leads to much better performance. In fact, correctly specified parametric imputation and tree-based random forest imputation perform similarly when estimating the interaction effect. Parametric imputation leads to slightly higher coverage for the interaction effect, but it has wider confidence intervals than random forest imputation and requires correct specification of the imputation model. Epidemiologists should take care in specifying MICE imputation models, and this paper assists in that task by providing a fair comparison of parametric and tree-based imputation in MICE.

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