Chronological bias occurs when changes over time—such as improvements in technique, technology, protocols, or team experience—affect the outcomes of an intervention, creating a biased comparison between groups treated at different time periods.

  • Treatment groups span different eras in clinical practice
  • Advances in perioperative care, imaging, or equipment are not controlled
  • Often present in retrospective cohort studies over long periods
  • Can confound outcomes, attributing differences to the treatment rather than the time in which it was applied
  • Comparing aneurysm clipping from 2012–2015 with coiling from 2018–2022 introduces chronological bias if the latter benefits from updated antiplatelet protocols, improved coils, or better ICU management.
  • Threatens the internal validity of comparative studies
  • Masks or exaggerates true differences between interventions
  • Creates false trends in outcomes attributed to technique rather than time
  • Use contemporaneous control groups
  • Include time as a covariate in statistical models
  • Acknowledge in the study limitations and avoid overinterpreting results across time spans
  • chronological_bias.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/15 06:55
  • by administrador