Abstract

BackgroundTo determine the clinical effectiveness of statins on cardiovascular mortality in practice, observational studies are needed. Control for confounding is essential in any observational study. Falsification end-points may be useful to determine if bias is present after adjustment has taken place.MethodsWe followed starters on statin therapy in the Netherlands aged 46 to 100 years over the period 1996 to 2012, from initiation of statin therapy until cardiovascular mortality or censoring. Within this group (n = 49,688, up to 16 years of follow-up), we estimated the effect of adherence to statin therapy (0 = completely non-adherent, 1 = fully adherent) on ischemic heart diseases and cerebrovascular disease (ICD10-codes I20-I25 and I60-I69) as well as respiratory and endocrine disease mortality (ICD10-codes J00-J99 and E00-E90) as falsification end points, controlling for demographic factors, socio-economic factors, birth cohort, adherence to other cardiovascular medications, and diabetes using time-varying Cox regression models.ResultsFalsification end-points indicated that a simpler model was less biased than a model with more controls. Adherence to statins appeared to be protective against cardiovascular mortality (HR: 0.70, 95 % CI 0.61 to 0.81).ConclusionsFalsification end-points helped detect overadjustment bias or bias due to competing risks, and thereby proved to be a useful technique in such a complex setting.

Highlights

  • To determine the clinical effectiveness of statins on cardiovascular mortality in practice, observational studies are needed

  • The aim of this study is to investigate the role of bias in an assessment of the effect of adherence to statin therapy on cardiovascular & cerebrovascular mortality among statin users in the Netherlands over the period 1994 to 2010

  • We found that the average defined dosage (DDD) of statin therapy gradually increased over time from about 1.03 DDD at the start to about 1.3 DDD at the end of follow-up

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Summary

Introduction

To determine the clinical effectiveness of statins on cardiovascular mortality in practice, observational studies are needed. To determine the clinical effectiveness of drugs, observational studies are needed. Comparisons of statin-users cannot be compared with nonusers, risking confounding by indication. By comparing statin-users among each other, for example by looking at adherence to prescribed regimen, confounding by indication is reduced. Such a comparison risks healthy adherer bias because higher adherence may correlate with a healthier lifestyle and higher adherence to other cardiovascular drugs. In the absence of direct measures of lifestyle, Bijlsma et al BMC Public Health (2016) 16:303 behavioral proxies such as neighborhood characteristics or birth cohort may provide a solution [5,6,7]

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