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Comparison of Type I error rates and statistical power of different propensity score methods
Authors:Falynn C Turley  David Redden  Janice L Case  Charles Katholi  Jeff Szychowski  Derek DuBay
Institution:1. Department of Biostatistics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA;2. Finance, Economics, and Accounting, Jacksonville State University, Jacksonville, AL, USA;3. Finance, Economics, and Accounting, Jacksonville State University, Jacksonville, AL, USA;4. The Kirklin Clinic of UAB Hospital, University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL, USA
Abstract:Propensity score analysis (PSA) is a technique to correct for potential confounding in observational studies. Covariate adjustment, matching, stratification, and inverse weighting are the four most commonly used methods involving propensity scores. The main goal of this research is to determine which PSA method performs the best in terms of protecting against spurious association detection, as measured by Type I error rate, while maintaining sufficient power to detect a true association, if one exists. An examination of these PSA methods along with ordinary least squares regression was conducted under two cases: correct PSA model specification and incorrect PSA model specification. PSA covariate adjustment and PSA matching maintain the nominal Type I error rate, when the PSA model is correctly specified, but only PSA covariate adjustment achieves adequate power levels. Other methods produced conservative Type I Errors in some scenarios, while liberal Type I error rates were observed in other scenarios.
Keywords:Propensity score  confounding  Type I error  power  logistic regression
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