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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

Date Submitted: Aug 24, 2021
Date Accepted: Apr 26, 2022
Date Submitted to PubMed: Apr 28, 2022

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Characterizing Anchoring Bias in Vaccine Comparator Selection Due to Health Care Utilization With COVID-19 and Influenza: Observational Cohort Study

Ostropolets A, Ryan P, Schuemie M, Hripcsak G

Characterizing Anchoring Bias in Vaccine Comparator Selection Due to Health Care Utilization With COVID-19 and Influenza: Observational Cohort Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2022;8(6):e33099

DOI: 10.2196/33099

PMID: 35482996

PMCID: 9250064

Differential anchoring effects of vaccination comparator selection: characterizing a potential bias due to healthcare utilization in COVID-19 versus influenza

  • Anna Ostropolets; 
  • Patrick Ryan; 
  • Martijn Schuemie; 
  • George Hripcsak

ABSTRACT

Background:

Observational data enables large-scale vaccine safety surveillance but requires careful evaluation of potential sources of bias. One potential source of bias is an index date selection procedure for the unvaccinated cohort or unvaccinated comparison time.

Objective:

Here, we evaluate different index date selection procedures for two vaccines: COVID-19 and influenza.

Methods:

For each vaccine, we extracted patient baseline characteristics on the index date and up to 450 days prior and then compared them to the characteristics of the unvaccinated patients indexed on an arbitrary date or indexed on a date of a visit. Additionally, we compared vaccinated patients indexed on the date of vaccination and the same patients indexed on a prior date or visit.

Results:

COVID-19 vaccination and influenza vaccination differ drastically from each other in terms of populations vaccinated and their status on the day of vaccination. When compared to indexing on a visit in unvaccinated population, influenza vaccination had markedly higher covariate proportions and COVID-19 vaccination had lower proportions of most covariates on the index date. In contrast, COVID-19 vaccination had similar covariate proportions when compared to an arbitrary date. These effects attenuated but were still present with a longer lookback period. The effect of day 0 was present even when patients served as their own controls.

Conclusions:

Patient baseline characteristics are sensitive to the choice of the index date. In vaccine safety studies, unexposed index event should represent vaccination settings. Study designs previously used to assess influenza vaccination must be reassessed for COVID-19 to account for a potentially healthier population and lack of medical activity on the day of vaccination.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Ostropolets A, Ryan P, Schuemie M, Hripcsak G

Characterizing Anchoring Bias in Vaccine Comparator Selection Due to Health Care Utilization With COVID-19 and Influenza: Observational Cohort Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2022;8(6):e33099

DOI: 10.2196/33099

PMID: 35482996

PMCID: 9250064

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