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Yasser Sabr د. ياسر صبر

Assistant Professor

Consultant, Maternal Fetal Medicine أستاذ مساعد | أستشاري صحة الأم والجنين

College of Medicine and University Hospitals
King Khalid University Hospital, 1st floor, Office 123
publication
Journal Article
2013

Immortal Time Bias in the Study of Stillbirth Risk Factors: The Example of Gestational Diabetes.

Current understanding of the increased risk for stillbirth in gestational diabetes mellitus is often based on large cohort studies in which the risk of stillbirth in women with this disease is compared with the risk in women without. However, such studies could be susceptible to immortal time bias because, although many cohorts begin at 20 weeks' gestation, pregnancies must "survive" until 24-28 weeks in order to be screened and diagnosed with gestational diabetes.
We describe the theoretical potential for immortal time bias in studies of stillbirth and gestational diabetes and then quantify the magnitude of the bias using 2006 United States vital statistics data.
Although gestational diabetes was protective against stillbirth when including all births (relative risk = 0.88 [95% confidence interval = 0.79-0.99]), restricting analyses to births at >28 weeks' gestation reversed the effect and diabetes became associated with an increased risk of stillbirth (1.25 [1.11-1.41]).
Immortal time before diagnosis of gestational diabetes may bias our understanding of the stillbirth risk associated with this condition.

Magazine \ Newspaper
Epidemiology (Cambridge, Mass.)
more of publication
publications

BACKGROUND: Routine surveillance of congenital anomalies has shown recent increases in ankyloglossia (tongue-tie) in British Columbia, Canada. We examined the temporal trends in ankyloglossia and…

2017
publications

OBJECTIVE: To describe temporal and regional variations in Canada in the use of operative vaginal delivery (OVD) at term for singleton pregnancies by pelvic station between 2004 and 2013.

2017
publications

OBJECTIVE: To identify the factors underlying the recent increase in maternal mortality ratios (maternal deaths per 100,000 live births) in the United States.

2017