Case-control studies
Background🔗
Data extracts often use an "index date" to define variables such as age, or presence of comorbidities at the start of a study. This can either be a fixed date (e.g. "2020-02-01") or a date that varies between patients, also known as dynamic dates (e.g. the date that people were hospitalised). However, some studies that use dynamic index dates for a "case" population and then have a matched "control" comparator group. Because the control group by definition doesn't have the event of interest, the convention is for them to inherit the index date from their matched "case". The process to extract data for such a matched case-control population in OpenSAFELY is described below.
Warning
At present, only the OpenSAFELY TPP backend supports case-control studies.
There are five steps to undertaking a case-control study (or matched cohort study) with OpenSAFELY:
- Extract data for the cases
- Extract data for the potential controls
- Match the cases to the potential controls
- Extract data for the matched controls
- Analysis
To begin with, our project.yaml looks like this:
version: '3.0'
expectations:
population_size: 1000
actions:
# Extract data for the cases
# Extract data for the potential controls
# Match the cases to the potential controls
# Extract data for the matched controls
# Analysis
Extract data for the cases🔗
In this step, we will construct a study definition to extract all the data we need for the cases: that is, the matching data, or the data we will use to match the cases to the potential controls; and the non-matching data, or the data we will use for analysis. To avoid duplicating code to extract the matching data and the non-matching data in this and the following steps, we could use separate Python scripts to share common study definition variables.
As we will construct multiple study definitions in this and the following steps, we will name this study definition study_definition_cases.py. When working with multiple study definitions, each study definition's suffix is used to name each corresponding output file. Here, the study definition's suffix is cases, so the corresponding output file will be named input_cases.csv.
Our project.yaml now includes the following action:
# ...
actions:
extract_cases:
run: cohortextractor:latest generate_cohort --study-definition study_definition_cases
outputs:
highly_sensitive:
cohort: output/input_cases.csv
Extract data for the potential controls🔗
The potential controls are the group of patients that are matched to the cases to give the matched controls. In this step, we will construct a second study definition to extract only the matching data for the potential controls. We will name this study definition study_definition_potential_controls.py.
Our project.yaml now includes the following action:
# ...
actions:
# ...
extract_potential_controls:
run: cohortextractor:latest generate_cohort --study-definition study_definition_potential_controls
outputs:
highly_sensitive:
cohort: output/input_potential_controls.csv
Match the cases to the potential controls🔗
In this step, we will use the OpenSAFELY matching library in a scripted action to match the cases to the potential controls. We will name this scripted action match.py. Whilst the OpenSAFELY matching library can output multiple files, we will use two: matching_report.txt and matched_matches.csv. The former contains information about the matching process. The latter contains the matched controls.
Our project.yaml now includes the following action:
# ...
actions:
# ...
matching:
run: python:latest python analysis/match.py
needs: [extract_cases, extract_potential_controls]
outputs:
moderately_sensitive:
matching_report: output/matching_report.txt
highly_sensitive:
matched_matches: output/matched_matches.csv
Alternatives to the OpenSAFELY matching library
Rather than using the OpenSAFELY matching library, you may wish to match the cases to the potential controls by implementing your own algorithm in a scripted action. If you do, please note that not all Python, R, or Stata packages are available to you; to find out which packages are, see the python-docker, r-docker, or stata-docker repositories. Alternatively, you can request new libraries.
Extract data for the matched controls🔗
In this step, we will construct a third study definition to extract only the non-matching data for the matched controls. We will name this study definition study_definition_controls.py.
We will use the functions patients.which_exist_in_file
and patients.with_value_from_file
.
We will use patients.which_exist_in_file
to include only the matched controls in the population:
from cohortextractor import StudyDefinition, patients
CONTROLS = "output/matched_matches.csv"
study = StudyDefinition(
index_date="2021-01-01", # Ignored
population=patients.which_exist_in_file(CONTROLS),
)
We will use patients.with_value_from_file
to access the case index dates:
from cohortextractor import codelist_from_csv, StudyDefinition, patients
CONTROLS = "output/matched_matches.csv"
codelist = codelist_from_csv("codelists/codelist.csv")
study = StudyDefinition(
index_date="2021-01-01", # Ignored
population=patients.which_exist_in_file(CONTROLS),
case_index_date=patients.with_value_from_file(
CONTROLS,
returning="case_index_date",
returning_type="date",
),
has_event_in_codelist=patients.with_these_clinical_events(
codelist,
on_or_after="case_index_date",
),
)
Our project.yaml now includes the following action:
# ...
actions:
# ...
extract_controls:
run: cohortextractor:latest generate_cohort --study-definition study_definition_controls
needs: [matching]
outputs:
highly_sensitive:
cohort: output/input_controls.csv
Analysis🔗
Finally, we will construct one or more scripted or reusable actions to undertake our analysis.