AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to enhance the transparency and efficiency of assessing diesel exhaust exposure in the New England Bladder Cancer Study by using systematic decision rules on questionnaire responses from participants.
  • Out of 2631 participants reporting jobs, decision rules categorized exposure metrics based on occupational history and questionnaire responses, finding that 20-25% of all jobs and 54-60% of diesel-related jobs were exposed.
  • The results showed a moderate level of agreement between the decision rule estimates and one-by-one job review estimates, suggesting that these decision rules can effectively replicate traditional methods and improve the exposure assessment process in similar studies.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Professional judgment is necessary to assess occupational exposure in population-based case-control studies; however, the assessments lack transparency and are time-consuming to perform. To improve transparency and efficiency, we systematically applied decision rules to questionnaire responses to assess diesel exhaust exposure in the population-based case-control New England Bladder Cancer Study.

Methods: 2631 participants reported 14 983 jobs; 2749 jobs were administered questionnaires ('modules') with diesel-relevant questions. We applied decision rules to assign exposure metrics based either on the occupational history (OH) responses (OH estimates) or on the module responses (module estimates); we then combined the separate OH and module estimates (OH/module estimates). Each job was also reviewed individually to assign exposure (one-by-one review estimates). We evaluated the agreement between the OH, OH/module and one-by-one review estimates.

Results: The proportion of exposed jobs was 20-25% for all jobs, depending on approach, and 54-60% for jobs with diesel-relevant modules. The OH/module and one-by-one review estimates had moderately high agreement for all jobs (κ(w)=0.68-0.81) and for jobs with diesel-relevant modules (κ(w)=0.62-0.78) for the probability, intensity and frequency metrics. For exposed subjects, the Spearman correlation statistic was 0.72 between the cumulative OH/module and one-by-one review estimates.

Conclusions: The agreement seen here may represent an upper level of agreement because the algorithm and one-by-one review estimates were not fully independent. This study shows that applying decision-based rules can reproduce a one-by-one review, increase transparency and efficiency, and provide a mechanism to replicate exposure decisions in other studies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3439531PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/oemed-2011-100524DOI Listing

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