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Misleading and avoidable: design-induced biases in observational studies evaluating cancer screening-the example of site-specific effectiveness of screening colonoscopy.

American journal of epidemiology 2026 Vol.195(2) p. 300-306

Braitmaier M, Schwarz S, Didelez V, Haug U

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Observational studies evaluating the effectiveness of cancer screening are often biased due to nonalignment at time zero, which can be avoided by target trial emulation (TTE).

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  • 연구 설계 case-control

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Braitmaier M, Schwarz S, et al. (2026). Misleading and avoidable: design-induced biases in observational studies evaluating cancer screening-the example of site-specific effectiveness of screening colonoscopy.. American journal of epidemiology, 195(2), 300-306. https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwaf069
MLA Braitmaier M, et al.. "Misleading and avoidable: design-induced biases in observational studies evaluating cancer screening-the example of site-specific effectiveness of screening colonoscopy.." American journal of epidemiology, vol. 195, no. 2, 2026, pp. 300-306.
PMID 40178880
DOI 10.1093/aje/kwaf069

Abstract

Observational studies evaluating the effectiveness of cancer screening are often biased due to nonalignment at time zero, which can be avoided by target trial emulation (TTE). We aimed to illustrate this by evaluating site-specific effectiveness of screening colonoscopy regarding colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence. Based on a German health care database, we assessed the effect of screening colonoscopy vs no screening colonoscopy in preventing CRC in the distal and the proximal colon over 12 years of follow-up in 55-69-year-old persons. We compared four different study designs: cohort and case-control study, each with/without alignment at time zero. In both analyses with time zero-alignment, screening colonoscopy showed a rather similar effectiveness in reducing the incidence of distal and proximal CRC (cohort analysis: 32% (95% CI, 27%-37%) vs 28% (20%-35%); case-control analysis: 27% vs 33%). Both analyses without alignment suggested a difference by site: Incidence reduction regarding distal and proximal CRC, respectively, was 65% (61%-68%) vs 37% (31%-43%) in the cohort analysis and 77% (67%-84%) vs 46% (25%-61%) in the case-control analysis. Violations of basic design principles can substantially bias the results of observational studies. In our example, it falsely suggested a much stronger preventive effect of colonoscopy in the distal vs the proximal colon. Our study illustrates that TTE avoids such design-induced biases.

MeSH Terms

Humans; Colonoscopy; Middle Aged; Aged; Colorectal Neoplasms; Early Detection of Cancer; Male; Female; Germany; Case-Control Studies; Bias; Observational Studies as Topic; Incidence; Research Design; Mass Screening