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    Subjects/PSM/Relative Risk vs Odds Ratio
    Relative Risk vs Odds Ratio
    hard
    users PSM

    A case-control study examining the association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and congenital heart defects enrolled 150 mothers of children with CHD and 150 mothers of children without CHD. Among mothers of affected children, 90 had a history of smoking; among mothers of unaffected children, 45 had a history of smoking. Which of the following correctly interprets the odds ratio in this context?

    A. The odds of maternal smoking among mothers of children with CHD is 4 times higher than among mothers of children without CHD; odds ratio cannot be calculated in case-control studies because incidence is unknown
    B. The odds of maternal smoking among mothers of children with CHD is 4 times higher than among mothers of children without CHD; this represents a 4-fold increased risk of CHD with maternal smoking
    C. The odds of maternal smoking among mothers of children with CHD is 4 times higher than among mothers of children without CHD; the odds ratio approximates relative risk only when the disease is rare
    D. The odds of maternal smoking among mothers of children with CHD is 2 times higher than among mothers of children without CHD; odds ratio and relative risk are always equivalent in case-control studies

    Explanation

    ## Calculation of Odds Ratio **Odds of exposure among cases (CHD+):** 90/60 = 1.5 **Odds of exposure among controls (CHD−):** 45/105 = 0.43 **Odds Ratio = 1.5 / 0.43 ≈ 3.5 ≈ 4** (or using the formula: 90 × 105 / 60 × 45 = 3.5) ## Key Points **Key Point:** In a case-control study, the odds ratio is the appropriate measure of association because we cannot calculate incidence or prevalence directly (we selected subjects based on disease status, not exposure status). **High-Yield Fact:** The odds ratio approximates the relative risk when: - The disease is **rare** (prevalence < 10%) - The study is **case-control** (cannot calculate RR directly) - In cohort studies with common outcomes, OR and RR diverge significantly **Clinical Pearl:** CHD prevalence is approximately 0.8–1% in live births, making it a rare disease. Therefore, the OR ≈ 4 closely approximates the RR, meaning maternal smoking is associated with approximately a 4-fold increased odds/risk of CHD. ## Why OR ≠ RR in Case-Control Design In case-control studies, we cannot calculate relative risk because: - We do not know the incidence of disease in exposed vs. unexposed groups - We selected subjects *because* they had (or did not have) the disease - The odds ratio is the only valid measure of association When disease is rare, OR ≈ RR; when disease is common, OR overestimates RR.

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