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. 2021 Oct 24;73:103648. doi: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2021.103648
Item No Recommendation
Title and abstract 1 (a) Indicate the study's design with a commonly used term in the title or the abstract
Page 2 – Lines 40–66
(b) Provide in the abstract an informative and balanced summary of what was done and what was found
Page 2 – Lines 40–66
Introduction
Background/rationale 2 Explain the scientific background and rationale for the investigation being reported
Pages 4 and 5 Lines 112–161
Objectives 3 State specific objectives, including any prespecified hypotheses
Pages 4 and 5 Lines 134–161
Methods
Study design 4 Present key elements of study design early in the paper
Page 5, 169–186
Setting 5 Describe the setting, locations, and relevant dates, including periods of recruitment, exposure, follow-up, and data collection
Page 5, 169–186
Participants 6 (a) Give the eligibility criteria, and the sources and methods of case ascertainment and control selection. Give the rationale for the choice of cases and controls
Page 5, 169–186
(b) For matched studies, give matching criteria and the number of controls per case
Page 5, 169–186
Variables 7 Clearly define all outcomes, exposures, predictors, potential confounders, and effect modifiers. Give diagnostic criteria, if applicable
Supplementary data Table S2
Data sources/ measurement 8* For each variable of interest, give sources of data and details of methods of assessment (measurement). Describe comparability of assessment methods if there is more than one group
Page 5, 169–186, (cases and controls) Supplementary data Table S2 (cases)
Bias 9 Describe any efforts to address potential sources of bias
Not applicable
Study size 10 Explain how the study size was arrived at
Page 5, 169–186,
Quantitative variables 11 Explain how quantitative variables were handled in the analyses. If applicable, describe which groupings were chosen and why
Page 7, 235–242,
Statistical methods 12 (a) Describe all statistical methods, including those used to control for confounding
Page 7, 235–242,
(b) Describe any methods used to examine subgroups and interactions
Page 7, 224–233,
(c) Explain how missing data were addressed
Not applicable
(d) If applicable, explain how matching of cases and controls was addressed
(e) Describe any sensitivity analyses
Results
Participants 13* (a) Report numbers of individuals at each stage of study—eg numbers potentially eligible, examined for eligibility, confirmed eligible, included in the study, completing follow-up, and analysed
Page 5, 169–186, Page 9, 10, 256–289
(b) Give reasons for non-participation at each stage
Not applicable
(c) Consider use of a flow diagram
Descriptive data 14* (a) Give characteristics of study participants (eg demographic, clinical, social) and information on exposures and potential confounders
Page 5, 169–186, (controls and cases) and Supplementary Table S2, (Cases)
(b) Indicate number of participants with missing data for each variable of interest
Supplementary Table S2
Outcome data 15* Report numbers in each exposure category, or summary measures of exposure
Page 9, 10, 256–289 (controls) and Supplementary Table S2 (cases)
Main results 16 (a) Give unadjusted estimates and, if applicable, confounder-adjusted estimates and their precision (eg, 95% confidence interval). Make clear which confounders were adjusted for and why they were included
Page 9, 10, 256–289 and Supplementary Table S2
(b) Report category boundaries when continuous variables were categorized
Supplementary Table S2
(c) If relevant, consider translating estimates of relative risk into absolute risk for a meaningful time period
Page 9, 10 256–289
Other analyses 17 Report other analyses done—eg analyses of subgroups and interactions, and sensitivity analyses
Page 8–10, 248–371
Discussion
Key results 18 Summarise key results with reference to study objectives
Page 10- 371–379
Limitations 19 Discuss limitations of the study, taking into account sources of potential bias or imprecision. Discuss both direction and magnitude of any potential bias
Page 13, 450–469
Interpretation 20 Give a cautious overall interpretation of results considering objectives, limitations, multiplicity of analyses, results from similar studies, and other relevant evidence
Pages 11–13, 373–469
Generalisability 21 Discuss the generalisability (external validity) of the study results
Pages 11–13, 373–469
Other information
Funding 22 Give the source of funding and the role of the funders for the present study and, if applicable, for the original study on which the present article is based
Page 7, 244–246

*Give information separately for cases and controls.

Note: An Explanation and Elaboration article discusses each checklist item and gives methodological background and published examples of transparent reporting. The STROBE checklist is best used in conjunction with this article (freely available on the Web sites of PLoS Medicine at http://www.plosmedicine.org/, Annals of Internal Medicine at http://www.annals.org/, and Epidemiology at http://www.epidem.com/). Information on the STROBE Initiative is available at http://www.strobe-statement.org.