A sensitivity analysis of bias in relative risk estimates due to disinfection by-product exposure misclassication

被引:20
|
作者
Wright, JM
Bateson, TF
机构
[1] US EPA, Off Res & Dev, Natl Ctr Environm Assessment, Cincinnati, OH 45268 USA
[2] Apex Epidemiol, Washington, DC USA
关键词
exposure assessment; misclassification bias; measurement error; disinfection by products; trihalomethanes; fetal development;
D O I
10.1038/sj.jea.7500389
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
We conducted a sensitivity analysis of relative risk estimates using local area mean disinfection by-product exposures. We used Monte Carlo simulations to generate data representing 100 towns, each with 100 births (n = 10,000). Each town was assigned a mean total trihalomethane (TTHM) exposure value (mean = 45, SD = 28) based on a variable number of sampling locations (range 2-10). True maternal TTHM exposure was randomly assigned from a lognormal distribution using that town's true mean value. We compared the effect of a 20 mg/1 increase in TTHM exposure on the risk of small-for-gestational age infancy using the true maternal exposure compared to various weighting measures of the town mean exposures. The exposure metrics included: (1) unweighted town mean, ( 2) town mean weighted by the inverse variance of the town mean, (3) town mean weighted by the inverse standard deviation of the town mean, (4) town mean weighted by 1-(standard deviation of sites per town/mean across all towns), and (5) a randomly selected value from one of the sites within the town of residence. To estimate the magnitude of misclassification bias from using the town mean concentrations, we compared the true exposure odds ratios (1.00, 1.20, 1.50, and 2.00) to the mean exposure odds ratios from the five exposure scenarios. Misclassification bias from the use of unweighted town mean exposures ranged from 19 to 39%, increasing in proportion to the size of the true effect estimates. Weighted town mean TTHM exposures were less biased than the unweighted estimates of maternal exposure, with bias ranging from 0 to 23%. The weighted town mean analyses showed that attenuation of the true effect of DBP exposure was diminished when town mean concentrations with large variability were downweighted. We observed a trade-off between bias and precision in the weighted exposure analyses, with the least biased effects estimates having the widest confidence intervals. Effect attenuation due to intrasystem variability was most evident in absolute and relative terms for larger odds ratios.
引用
收藏
页码:212 / 216
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A sensitivity analysis of bias in relative risk estimates due to disinfection by-product exposure misclassification
    J Michael Wright
    Thomas F Bateson
    Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, 2005, 15 : 212 - 216
  • [2] Sensitivity analyses of disinfection by-product exposure estimates
    Wright, JM
    Bateson, TF
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2002, 13 (04) : S108 - S108
  • [3] dbpRisk: Disinfection By-Product Risk Estimation
    Kyriakou, Marios
    Eliades, Demetrios G.
    Polycarpou, Marios M.
    CRITICAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURES SECURITY (CRITIS 2014), 2016, 8985 : 57 - 68
  • [4] The effect of boiling water on disinfection by-product exposure
    Krasner, SW
    Wright, JM
    WATER RESEARCH, 2005, 39 (05) : 855 - 864
  • [5] Correcting for bias in relative risk estimates due to exposure measurement error: A case study of occupational exposure to antineoplastics in pharmacists
    Spiegelman, D
    Valanis, B
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1998, 88 (03) : 406 - 412
  • [6] Disinfection by-product analysis in drinking water
    Xie, Y
    AMERICAN LABORATORY, 2000, 32 (22) : 50 - +
  • [7] Regrets analysis of disinfection by-product control
    Cromwell, JE
    MICROBIAL PATHOGENS AND DISINFECTION BY-PRODUCTS IN DRINKING WATER: HEALTH EFFECTS AND MANAGEMENT OF RISKS, 2000, : 411 - 423
  • [8] Summation of disinfection by-product CHO cell relative toxicity indices: sampling bias, uncertainty, and a path forward
    McKenna, Elizabeth
    Thompson, Kyle A. A.
    Taylor-Edmonds, Lizbeth
    McCurry, Daniel L. L.
    Hanigan, David
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE-PROCESSES & IMPACTS, 2020, 22 (03) : 708 - 718
  • [9] Drinking water disinfection by-product exposure and fetal growth
    Hoffman, Caroline S.
    Mendola, Pauline
    Savitz, David A.
    Herring, Amy H.
    Loomis, Dana
    Hartmann, Katherine E.
    Singer, Philip C.
    Weinberg, Howard S.
    Olshan, Andrew F.
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2008, 19 (05) : 729 - 737
  • [10] Drinking water disinfection by-product exposure and duration of gestation
    Hoffman, Caroline S.
    Mendola, Pauline
    Savitz, David A.
    Herring, Amy H.
    Loomis, Dana
    Hartmann, Katherine E.
    Singer, Philip C.
    Weinberg, Howard S.
    Olshan, Andrew F.
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2008, 19 (05) : 738 - 746