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Journal Article

Citation

Mez J, Alosco ML, Nowinski CJ, McKee AC, Tripodis Y. Neurology 2021; 97(6): 297-298.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1212/WNL.0000000000012381

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Schwab et al.1 did not find a statistically significant association between position played and career duration and autopsy-confirmed chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in elite football and ice hockey players. The study's limitations associated with statistical power, measurement error, and sample selection hinder interpretation of the presented data. The authors state that a sample size of about 14 is required "to detect a 50% difference in CTE diagnoses between groups with 80% power."1 Player position is unlikely to account for a 50% difference in CTE status based on work by Mez et al.,2 which indicates no effect for player position in >250 former football players. Assuming that player position accounts for a much smaller effect in CTE status, such as 10%, a sample size of approximately 400 would be needed. In Mez et al., each additional year of football play accounted for a 30% increase in odds of CTE. Given the sample size and standard deviation reported for career duration in this article, the authors were only 80% powered to detect an effect 2.4 times larger and were only 55% powered to detect the effect presented in Mez et al. ...

Keywords: Canadian football


Language: en

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