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On Variance of the Treatment Effect in the Treated When Estimated by Inverse Probability Weighting

Sarah A. Reifeis, Michael G. Hudgens

2022American Journal of Epidemiology36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the analysis of observational studies, inverse probability weighting (IPW) is commonly used to consistently estimate the average treatment effect (ATE) or the average treatment effect in the treated (ATT). The variance of the IPW ATE estimator is often estimated by assuming that the weights are known and then using the so-called "robust" (Huber-White) sandwich estimator, which results in conservative standard errors (SEs). Here we show that using such an approach when estimating the variance of the IPW ATT estimator does not necessarily result in conservative SE estimates. That is, assuming the weights are known, the robust sandwich estimator may be either conservative or anticonservative. Thus, confidence intervals for the ATT using the robust SE estimate will not be valid, in general. Instead, stacked estimating equations which account for the weight estimation can be used to compute a consistent, closed-form variance estimator for the IPW ATT estimator. The 2 variance estimators are compared via simulation studies and in a data analysis of the association between smoking and gene expression.

Topics & Concepts

WeightingStatisticsInverse probability weightingVariance (accounting)InverseMathematicsInverse probabilityMedicineBayesian probabilityPosterior probabilityRadiologyEconomicsGeometryPropensity score matchingAccountingStatistical Methods and InferenceAdvanced Causal Inference TechniquesStatistical Methods in Clinical Trials
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