The Practical Uses of Causal Diagrams Michael Joffe Imperial College London.

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Presentation transcript:

The Practical Uses of Causal Diagrams Michael Joffe Imperial College London

The use of DAGs in epidemiology the theory of Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) has developed formal rules for controlling confounding, equivalent to algebraic formulations in their rigour, but simpler to use and less error-prone the resulting graphical theory is found to conform to traditional “rules of thumb” – but is a better guide in difficult conditions

A typical DAG in epidemiology from Hernán, MA, Hernández-Díaz S, Robins, JM. A structural approach to selection bias. Epidemiology 2004; 15(5): L is parental socioeconomic status U is attraction towards physical activity (unmeasured) C is “risk” of becoming a firefighter E is being physically active (“exposure”) D is heart disease (“outcome”)

The use of DAGs in epidemiology the theory of Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) has developed formal rules for controlling confounding, equivalent to algebraic formulations in their rigour, but simpler to use and less error-prone the resulting graphical theory is found to conform to traditional “rules of thumb” – but is a better guide in difficult conditions

The use of DAGs in epidemiology the theory of Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) has developed formal rules for controlling confounding, equivalent to algebraic formulations in their rigour, but simpler to use and less error-prone the resulting graphical theory is found to conform to traditional “rules of thumb” – but is a better guide in difficult conditions the focus is on a single link: effect of E on D arrows mean causation: a variable alters the magnitude, probability and/or severity of the next variable it can readily cope with multi-causation – the representation of effect modification is still problematic

Pearl: causal & statistical languages associational concept: can be defined as a joint distribution of observed variables correlation regression risk ratio dependence likelihood conditionalization “controlling for” causal concept: influence effect confounding explanation intervention randomization instrumental variables attribution “holding constant”

Four ways of explaining a robust statistical association X X X X Y Y Y Y C C causation reverse causation common ancestor (confounding) common descendant (Berkson bias)

The SIR model of infections β ν

this type of “compartmental model” is widely used in infectious disease epidemiology it can only be used where the population can be divided unambiguously into categories: a flow chart another example is Ross’ classic equation for malaria: N = p.m.i.a.b.s.f where N is new infections/month; p is population; m is proportion infected; i is proportion infectious among the infected; a is av. no. of mosquitoes/person; b is proportion of uninfected mosquitoes, s is proportion of mosquitoes that survive; f is proportion of infected mosqitoes that feed on humans this only applies to a uni-causal situation (mosquitoes) what is the equivalent in typical multi-causal situations? Modelling the whole system I

Transport-related health problems

Modelling the whole system II “web of causation”; “upstream” influences causal diagrams are constructed based on substantive knowledge of the topic area plus evidence chains of causation, not just one link; and multiple chains – assumption of independence multidisciplinary individual & group levels are combined – as is routine in infectious disease epidemiology organised by economic/policy sector health determines the content of the diagram – “driven by the bottom line”

Conditional independence Z = genotype of parents X, Y = genotypes of 2 children If we know the genotype of the parents, then the children’s genotypes are conditionally independent Z X Y diagram adapted from Best, Richardson & Jackson X and Y are conditionally independent given Z if, knowing Z, discovering Y tells you nothing more about X P(X | Y, Z) = P(X | Z)

Conditional independence provides mathematical basis for splitting up large system into smaller components D EB CA F CA C B D E D E F diagram adapted from Best, Richardson & Jackson

Functions of diagrams: scientific the aim is a diagram that describes causal relations “out there” in the world, not a mental map a framework for analysis, e.g. statistical modelling to make assumptions and hypotheses explicit for discussion, and for planning data collection and analysis to place hypotheses in the public domain prior to testing – a conjecture that is open to refutation to identify evidence gaps to generate a research agenda

Empirical aspects default: “all arrows” (saturated model) is conservative – omission is a stronger statement than inclusion corollary: deletion following statistical analysis is the strong step – uses model selection methods, e.g. AIC quantification of the links that remain transmissibility: X → Y and Y → Z does not necessarily imply that X → Y → Z, e.g. in the case of a threshold a diagram is not like a single study, it’s more like a synthesis, => the issue of generalisability a single diagram can be used to integrate multiple datasets suitable both for qualitative and quantitative analysis

Diagrams and evidence a conjectural diagram can be formed from substantive knowledge of a subject, as a basis for analysis diagrams evolve from conjectural to well-supported, as evidence is accumulated it is crucial to specify the status of any particular diagram – an analysis of the assumptions and judgements that have been made, the degree of uncertainty and the strength of evidence for the structure of the diagram and for each of the links (including those thought to be absent)

Causes of the causes of health Underlying causes e.g. socioeconomic factors Determinants (risk factors) Health status (diseases etc)

Transport-related health problems

Altering the causes of the causes Policy options alterable causes Changes in alterable risk factors Changes in health status

Health impact of transport policies

“Change” models: advantages Parsimony: the immense complexity of the pathways can be greatly reduced by focusing on changes, especially in the absence of effect modification; Philosophy: causality is more readily grasped when something is altered, e.g. a particular road layout rather than “roads” as a necessary condition of “road deaths”; Pragmatism: changes in the determinants of health determinants link naturally to policy options (cf Wanless: “natural experiments”).

Effect of the coal ban, Dublin, 1990 before-after comparison of pollution concentration, adjusted for weather etc 72 months before and after the ban also controls for influenza and age structure all-Ireland controls for secular changes

Emissions control as a technical fix

Car dependence

labor productivity nutritional intake health status

labor productivity nutritional intake health status exposure to infectious agents contaminants e.g. aflatoxins chemicals e.g. pesticides war, natural catastrophe, etc micronutrient content infant feeding practices land quantity & fertility climate & weather pests, e.g. fungi, rats inputs, e.g. irrigation, chemicals tools & technology

The SIR model of infections β ν

The basic reproductive number R 0 is given by: where β is the contact rate (infectivity), and ν is the recovery rate (= 1/D where D is duration) β ν

The SIR model of infections The basic reproductive number R 0 is given by: where β is the contact rate (infectivity), and ν is the recovery rate (= 1/D where D is duration) β ν

THANK YOU!