1 / 27

W507 – Epidemiology

W507 – Epidemiology. Epidemiology. Scientific process that attempts to link exposure to hazardous substances to specific health effects. Statistical correlations developed to indicate degree of risk associated with a particular exposure pattern

Download Presentation

W507 – Epidemiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. W507 – Epidemiology

  2. Epidemiology • Scientific process that attempts to link exposure to hazardous substances to specific health effects. • Statistical correlations developed to indicate degree of risk associated with a particular exposure pattern • Epidemiological studies tend to be complex and outside the remit of most industrial hygienists • However, important to understand the principles of epidemiology

  3. Epidemiology • Much information is derived from animal tests, in-vitro tests and comparison with similar chemicals • However, to establish actual risks in a population an epidemiological study is often the only valid technique • Aim is to establish a link between exposure and development of disease or ill-health e.g. • Angiosarcoma of the liver and exposure to vinyl chloride monomer • Mesothelioma of the lung pleura and exposure to asbestos • However, clear evidence may not be available and many studies have limitations and deficiencies • Historical data may be unclear or not valid • Potential problems of bias or other confounding factors in selection or monitoring of groups under study

  4. Epidemiological terms • Incidence rates • Number of new cases of ill-health or disease that occur in a population in a period of time • Commonly expressed in number of new cases per 1000 people in group under study per year • Prevalence rates • Total number of cases of ill-health or disease that exist in the population at a particular point in time • Affected by incidence of new cases but also the duration of the effects • Findings may be expressed in terms of morbidity (number of cases of illness) or of mortality (death) rates

  5. Measures of frequency • Incidence and prevalence rates need to be compared to a reference (or control) group or population • Incidence and prevalence rates can be expressed as a ratio or ‘Standardised Mortality Ratio’ (SMR) compared to reference group • If no difference between study and reference group the SMR would be 1 • If greater incidence or prevalence rate in study group compared to reference group the SMR would be greater than 1 • (Note: some texts quote SMR’s as percentage of expected numbers of deaths or events – i.e. if no difference SMR would be 100)

  6. Measures of frequency • Major potential difficulty is identifying a suitable reference population which must be matched to the study group in all aspects except exposure to the substance. • Potential areas of difference include • Age distribution • General health levels • e.g. working population tends to be more healthy than the general population as this includes people unable to work due to ill-health

  7. Causation or association • Important to differentiate between causation and association • Study may show a link (association) between exposure to a substance and a health effect • This does not necessarily mean there is a direct causal link • The association may be spurious or it may be indirect through other known or unknown variables • A number of criteria have been developed (Bradford-Hill criteria) that can be examined to provide support for a causal link

  8. Bradford-Hill Criteria • Strength of association • Temporality • Consistency • Biological plausibility • Coherence • Specificity • Dose-response relationship • Experimental evidence • Analogy

  9. Bradford-Hill Criteria • None of the nine criteria provide indisputable evidence for or against a cause and effect hypothesis • Rarely will all nine points be present – however the more that are, the stronger the association • They can to a greater or lesser extent support or refute the hypothesis • Quality of study should also be assessed • Those with appropriate statistical analysis and those published in peer-reviewed journals carry more weight • Claims of causation should not be made lightly as poorly justified claims can be very misleading

  10. Causation or association – smoking and lung cancer • Strength of association • Lung cancer rates far higher for smokers than non-smokers • Temporality • Smoking precedes onset of disease • Consistency • Different types of studies produce the same result • Biological plausibility • Theory that smoking causes tissue damage that over time could cause cancer is highly plausible • Coherence • Theory ‘makes sense’ given current knowledge

  11. Causation or association – smoking and lung cancer • Specificity • Lung cancer is predicted by incidence of smoking • Dose-response relationship • Data showed linear relationship between amount smoked and incidence • Experimental evidence • Animal experiments using tobacco tar produced cancer in tissue • Analogy • Induced smoking in animal experiments showed increased lung cancer

  12. Bias All epidemiological studies are subject to bias: • Selection bias in study group or control group • Information bias related to the quality and accuracy of data gathered as well as errors by the interviewer or interviewee • Confounding factors influence both the exposure and the outcome and therefore may show a spurious link Many of these factors can be controlled at the planning stage of the study

  13. Statistical significance • It is important to determine whether the apparent link between exposure and outcome is statistically significant i.e. unlikely to have occurred by chance • Most studies define statistically significant as 95% or better confidence that the results were not due to chance – i.e. less than 5% (1 in 20) probability the association was by chance • Sometimes written as a probability of ‘p <0.05’ • Lower the probability or significance the stronger the evidence • Establishing statistical significance is important but is not in itself enough to confirm causality. At this stage criteria developed by Bradford-Hill need to be examined

  14. Types of epidemiological studies • Longitudinal studies • Follow a group of people over period of time with repeated observations of risk factors and health effects • Vary widely in size and duration (even decades) • Two common types of longitudinal study are cohort and case-control studies • Cross-sectional studies

  15. Longitudinal studies • Case-control studies • Used to identify factors that may have caused a particular effect or illness • Tend to be retrospective • Study a group (the ‘cases’) who have the effect or illness and compare with another group who do not have the effect or illness (the ‘controls’) • Gather information on past exposure to the factor or substance – often difficult to get accurate data • Often difficult to avoid possible confounding factors when choosing the control group • Usually not the most robust type of study but often used to identify exposure / disease relationships that can then be investigated more fully

  16. Longitudinal studies • Cohort studies • Tend to be prospective • Gathers data over period of time on the incidence of the effect • Study a group of people who are exposed to a particular substance • Cohort group identified before appearance of the effect • Control group identified either from the general population or from another similar cohort who have had little or no exposure to the substance in question • Potentially the most robust type of study • Tend to take a long time to complete and as such can be complex and expensive

  17. Cross-sectional studies • Involves observation of a group of people at a particular moment in time • Can be considered as a ‘snap-shot’ of the prevalence of the effect • Group compared with a similar matched control group • Relatively quick and inexpensive • However, study only deals with a particular moment in time and cannot give information on exposure and outcome as a time dependant relationship • Not suited to an effect that is uncommon

  18. W507 – Epidemiology case study

  19. Epidemiology case study • Concerns have been raised that a number of people working at a plant producing ortho-toluidine have developed bladder cancer over the last few years • What information would you initially require if you were investigating the above?

  20. Initial information required • Other chemicals used • Are all workers exposed to the ortho-toluidine – or just some groups? • What levels of exposure have occurred to ortho-toluidine? • Number of people working at the plant • Number of cases of bladder cancer • When were the cases of bladder cancer first noted? • When was ortho-toluidine first used? • What problems may there be in obtaining accurate information?

  21. Epidemiological case study • What type of epidemiological study would you suggest for this scenario? • To evaluate whether there is an increased risk of bladder cancer a reference or control group is needed • Who would you select for this reference group?

  22. Epidemiological case study • What sources would you use to gather information about exposure levels and occurrence of bladder cancer for the case and reference groups? • What problems may there be in getting accurate information?

  23. Epidemiological case study • 13 cases of bladder cancer out of 1749 people who worked at plant • Expected number of cases of bladder cancer in the general population – 2.1 per 1000 • What is the SMR (standardised mortality ratio)?

  24. Epidemiological case study • Is this SMR (3.5) significant or simply a random or chance occurrence? • Statistical analysis required • 95% confidence limits of SMR found to be 1.8 – 6.2 • Does this prove a causal link?

  25. Epidemiological case study • What possible confounding factors may need to be considered when designing the study? • Other chemicals used • Smoking habits • Age distribution of case and reference groups

  26. Epidemiological case study • Results of epidemiological study • See tables 1 to 3 • Animal studies show increased rates of cancer in both mice and rats • Ortho-toluidine is similar chemical structure to other aromatic amines which have shown an increased risk of bladder cancer • Use Bradford-Hill criteria to assess whether there is a causal link

  27. Epidemiological case study • Bradford-Hill criteria • Strength of association • Temporality • Consistency • Biological plausibility • Coherence • Specificity • Dose-response relationship • Experimental evidence • Analogy

More Related