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Temporomandibular Disorders
Author Bios
Introduction
Epidemiology
Currently selected section: Population Perspective
Developmental Perspective
Ecological Perspective
Epidemiologic Measures
Defining a Case
Pain Location
Pain Frequency, Duration and Severity
Recency of Pain
Ambient Pain or Pain on Function?
Clinical Signs and Symptoms
Pain Impact/Disability
Co-morbidity
Choosing an Appropriate Design
Cross-sectional Surveys
Longitudinal Studies
Currently selected section: Case-control Studies
Prospective Designs
Preventive and Clinical Trials
Clinical Epidemiology
Practical Considerations
Sample Size
Standardizing Data Collection
Response Burden
Summary

 

Chapter 26: Studying the Epidemiology of Temporomanibular Disorders: Case-control Studies
          

In studies of the etiology of chronic disease, the case-control design has been the most extensively used epidemiologic method over the last twenty years. This design has also been extensively used in epidemiologic investigations of TMD.

Case-control studies are a cost-efficient method of studying the association of a putative risk factor with disease onset. Because of a large number of threats to the validity of case-control studies, the use of this design is sometimes controversial (Feinstein, 1979). However, the successes of the case-control method in identifying causal processes that were later confirmed by more rigorous methods have been well documented. Schlesselman (1982) provides a thorough treatment of the methods of the case-control study. For a useful synopsis of the methods, see Greenberg and Ibrahim (1985).

The elements of a case-control study include:

  • A sample of recent onset cases of the condition of interest;
  • A sample of controls selected in a way that does not introduce sampling bias relative to cases with respect to risk factors; and
  • Information gathered on cases and controls using the same methods.
  • The resulting data are analyzed through contingency table analysis. In the simplest case, a two by two table is constructed in which the columns represent persons with or without the condition under study and the rows represent persons with or without the risk factor of interest.

    Case-control studies are used to estimate the odds ratio for risk factors of interest. The odds ratio measures the risk of developing the disease or condition in a group with a particular factor relative to the risk of the disease or condition in a group without the risk factor of interest. Multivariate extensions of contingency table analysis allow for estimation of odds ratios while controlling for other variables (Bishop et al., 1978).

    While the case-control design presents difficulties in determining the order of causation, a well designed and executed case-control study can provide scientific data that are quite valuable.

    Example
    In an analysis of data from a large health maintenance organization, LeResche et al. (1997) compared exogenous hormone use, in the form of oral contraceptives or hormone replacement therapy, among women referred for treatment of TMD pain and control women of the same age who were not referred for treatment. Exposure to oral contraceptives in young women, and exposure to hormone replacement therapy with estrogen (but not progestin) in older women were associated with increased risk of TMD pain, after controlling for overall use of health services.

     

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