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. 2024 Feb 27;16(2):1289–1312. doi: 10.21037/jtd-23-1039

Table 2. Risk of bias for the cohort study.

Study Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 Q11 Risk
Shemirani et al. (36) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Unclear Unclear Yes Low

Cohort: Q1. Were the two groups similar and recruited from the same population? Q2. Were the exposures measured similarly to assign people to both exposed and unexposed groups? Q3. Was the exposure measured in a valid and reliable way? Q4. Were confounding factors identified? Q5. Were strategies to deal with confounding factors stated? Q6. Were the groups/participants free of the outcome at the start of the study (or at the moment of exposure)? Q7. Were the outcomes measured in a valid and reliable way? Q8. Was the follow up time reported and sufficient to be long enough for outcomes to occur? Q9. Was follow up complete, and if not, were the reasons to loss to follow up described and explored? Q10. Were strategies to address incomplete follow up utilized? Q11. Was appropriate statistical analysis used?