Nested case-control and case-cohort methods of sampling from a cohort: a critical comparison.

B Langholz, D C Thomas
Author Information
  1. B Langholz: Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California, School of Medicine, Los Angeles 90033-9987.

Abstract

The recently developed case-cohort method of sampling from a cohort is compared with the nested case-control method. Corrected asymptotic relative efficiency results show that the case-cohort design for single "disease" outcomes offers less improvement for intervention trials for which there is no random censoring than originally suggested. Furthermore, simulation results indicate that if there is moderate random censoring or staggered entry, the case-cohort method can do substantially worse than the nested case-control method.

Grants

  1. CA14089/NCI NIH HHS
  2. CA42949/NCI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Case-Control Studies
Clinical Trials as Topic
Cohort Studies
Disease
Efficiency
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Models, Statistical
Probability

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0case-cohortmethodcase-controlsamplingnestedresultsrandomcensoringrecentlydevelopedcohortcomparedCorrectedasymptoticrelativeefficiencyshowdesignsingle"disease"outcomesofferslessimprovementinterventiontrialsoriginallysuggestedFurthermoresimulationindicatemoderatestaggeredentrycansubstantiallyworseNestedmethodscohort:criticalcomparison

Similar Articles

Cited By