On 2017 Jul 13, Thomas Littlejohns commented:
Thank you for your comment as well as the link to your informative article on selection and collider bias.
The overall aim of the current paper was to investigate the representativeness of UK Biobank participants on a number of characteristics and health outcomes. The cohort has been described as healthier than the general population (due to the low response rate and voluntary recruitment process), however this is the first time the evidence has been provided to confirm this. Whilst UK Biobank was not set up to be representative, providing the empirical evidence for this, as opposed to informing the research community anecdotally, will hopefully help clarify what questions the resource is well-designed to address. Primarily, exposure-outcome associations and not deriving prevalence and incidence rates that apply to the general population.
However, we are in complete agreement with Marcus Munafo and colleagues that researchers also need to be aware of the potential for biases to be introduced due to the ‘healthy volunteer’ nature of the cohort and included the following on pg.10 – “As with all observational studies, it is incumbent on researchers to acknowledge potential sources of bias on a case-by-case basis that might affect the generalisability of exposure-disease associations, such as residual confounding, reverse causation and self-selection bias”.
Essentially, the take home message is that UK Biobank is well designed for providing generalisable associations between exposures and outcomes. But as with all observational studies, researchers should take care when interpreting their findings and acknowledge the range of biases that could drive any associations, including selection bias if applicable.
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