When doing a logistic regression, $y = x_1+x_2$, it gave an odds ratio for $x_1$ of $3.1$. When doing another logistic regression, $y = x_1+x_2+x_3$, it gave an odds ratio for $x_1$ of $5.1$. Does this make sense? I thought when increasing the number of adjusted variables, odds ratio for $x_1$ should be reduced. Any suggestions for interpreting why odds ratio for $x_1$ got increased after adding another covariate?
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1$\begingroup$ Have a look at the paper of Norton & Dowd (2017). They explain that odds ratios really estimate $\exp(\beta/\sigma)$ where $\sigma$ is the standard deviation of the error term. That means that odds ratios from models containing different predictors can't really be compared. See also here. $\endgroup$– COOLSerdashCommented Dec 13, 2019 at 12:51
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$\begingroup$ Thanks for the links, very helpful $\endgroup$– markCommented Dec 13, 2019 at 16:09
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$\begingroup$ What do you mean by the odds ratio of $x_1$? $x_1$ is a variable. Odds ratio is a value. $\endgroup$– AcccumulationCommented Dec 13, 2019 at 20:05
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$\begingroup$ please fix your title $\endgroup$– Glen_bCommented Dec 14, 2019 at 10:28
1 Answer
There is no particular reason why the odds ratio for one variable should go down (or up) when you add another variable. It depends on the relationships among all the variables.
For example, if you are measuring the risk of having HIV/AIDS in a general population and you have sexual orientation as one independent variable, the odds ratio will go up if you add sex as another independent variable.
Or suppose you are measuring the chance of someone being a professional athlete. If you have BMI as one variable, the OR will go up if you add age to the model.
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1$\begingroup$ Thanks for your explanation. That makes sense. $\endgroup$– markCommented Dec 13, 2019 at 16:11