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arxiv: 2310.03235 · v2 · pith:ANAWUXYV · submitted 2023-10-05 · stat.AP

Applying the causal roadmap to longitudinal national Danish registry data: a case study of second-line diabetes medication and dementia

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classification stat.AP
keywords causalroadmaplongitudinalregistrydiabetessecond-linechallengesdata
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The causal roadmap is a formal framework for causal and statistical inference that supports clear specification of the causal question, interpretable and transparent statement of required causal assumptions, robust inference, and optimal precision. The roadmap is thus particularly well-suited to evaluating longitudinal causal effects using large scale registries; however, application of the roadmap to registry data also introduces particular challenges. In this paper we provide a detailed case study of the longitudinal causal roadmap applied to the Danish National Registry to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of second-line diabetes drugs on dementia risk. Specifically, we evaluate the difference in counterfactual five-year cumulative risk of dementia if a target population of adults with type 2 diabetes had initiated and remained on GLP-1 receptor agonists (a second-line diabetes drug) compared to a range of active comparator protocols. Time-dependent confounding is accounted for through use of the iterated conditional expectation representation of the longitudinal g-formula as a statistical estimand. Statistical estimation uses longitudinal targeted maximum likelihood, incorporating machine learning. We provide practical guidance on the implementation of the roadmap using registry data, and highlight how rare exposures and outcomes over long-term follow up can raise challenges for flexible and robust estimators, even in the context of the large sample sizes provided by the registry. We demonstrate how simulations can be used to help address these challenges by supporting careful estimator pre-specification. We find a protective effect of GLP-1RAs compared to some but not all other second-line treatments.

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