Literature DB >> 21976309

Combining a job-exposure matrix with exposure measurements to assess occupational exposure to benzene in a population cohort in shanghai, china.

Melissa C Friesen1, Joseph B Coble, Wei Lu, Xiao-Ou Shu, Bu-Tian Ji, Shouzheng Xue, Lutzen Portengen, Wong-Ho Chow, Yu-Tang Gao, Gong Yang, Nathaniel Rothman, Roel Vermeulen.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Generic job-exposure matrices (JEMs) are often used in population-based epidemiologic studies to assess occupational risk factors when only the job and industry information of each subject is available. JEM ratings are often based on professional judgment, are usually ordinal or semi-quantitative, and often do not account for changes in exposure over time. We present an empirical Bayesian framework that combines ordinal subjective JEM ratings with benzene measurements. Our aim was to better discriminate between job, industry, and time differences in exposure levels compared to using a JEM alone.
METHODS: We combined 63 221 short-term area air measurements of benzene exposure (1954-2000) collected during routine health and safety inspections in Shanghai, China, with independently developed JEM intensity ratings for each job and industry using a mixed-effects model. The fixed-effects terms included the JEM intensity ratings for job and industry (both ordinal, 0-3) and a time trend that we incorporated as a b-spline. The random-effects terms included job (n = 33) and industry nested within job (n = 399). We predicted the benzene concentration in two ways: (i) a calibrated JEM estimate was calculated using the fixed-effects model parameters for calendar year and JEM intensity ratings; (ii) a job-/industry-specific estimate was calculated using the fixed-effects model parameters and the best linear unbiased predictors from the random effects for job and industry using an empirical Bayes estimation procedure. Finally, we applied the predicted benzene exposures to a prospective population-based cohort of women in Shanghai, China (n = 74 942).
RESULTS: Exposure levels were 13 times higher in 1965 than in 2000 and declined at a rate that varied from 4 to 15% per year from 1965 to 1985, followed by a small peak in the mid-1990s. The job-/industry-specific estimates had greater differences between exposure levels than the calibrated JEM estimates (97.5th percentile/2.5th percentile exposure level, (B)(G)R(95)(B): 20.4 versus 3.0, respectively). The calibrated JEM and job-/industry-specific estimates were moderately correlated in any given year (Pearson correlation, r(p) = 0.58). We classified only those jobs and industries with a job or industry JEM exposure probability rating of 3 (>50% of workers exposed) as exposed. As a result, 14.8% of the subjects and 8.7% of the employed person-years in the study population were classified as benzene exposed. The cumulative exposure metrics based on the calibrated JEM and job-/industry-specific estimates were highly correlated (r(p) = 0.88).
CONCLUSIONS: We provide a useful framework for combining quantitative exposure data with expert-based exposure ratings in population-based studies that maximized the information from both sources. Our framework calibrated the ratings to a concentration scale between ratings and across time and provided a mechanism to estimate exposure when a job/industry group reported by a subject was not represented in the exposure database. It also allowed the job/industry groups' exposure levels to deviate from the pooled average for their respective JEM intensity ratings.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21976309      PMCID: PMC3259038          DOI: 10.1093/annhyg/mer080

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg        ISSN: 0003-4878


  51 in total

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2.  Statistical modelling of formaldehyde occupational exposure levels in French industries, 1986-2003.

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3.  An empirical hierarchical Bayesian unification of occupational exposure assessment methods.

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4.  Temporal trends of flour dust exposure in the United Kingdom, 1985-2003.

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5.  Exposure to inhalable dust and its cyclohexane soluble fraction since the 1970s in the rubber manufacturing industry in the European Union.

Authors:  F de Vocht; R Vermeulen; I Burstyn; W Sobala; A Dost; D Taeger; U Bergendorf; K Straif; P Swuste; H Kromhout
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2007-10-10       Impact factor: 4.402

6.  Cohort study among workers exposed to benzene in China: II. Exposure assessment.

Authors:  M Dosemeci; G L Li; R B Hayes; S N Yin; M Linet; W H Chow; Y Z Wang; Z L Jiang; T R Dai; W U Zhang
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7.  The Shanghai Women's Health Study: rationale, study design, and baseline characteristics.

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8.  A hospital-based case-control study of acute myeloid leukemia in Shanghai: analysis of environmental and occupational risk factors by subtypes of the WHO classification.

Authors:  Otto Wong; Fran Harris; Thomas W Armstrong; Fu Hua
Journal:  Chem Biol Interact       Date:  2009-11-10       Impact factor: 5.192

9.  An occupation and exposure linkage system for the study of occupational carcinogenesis.

Authors:  S K Hoar; A S Morrison; P Cole; D T Silverman
Journal:  J Occup Med       Date:  1980-11

10.  Occupational exposure to organic solvents and breast cancer in women.

Authors:  Beata Peplonska; Patricia Stewart; Neonila Szeszenia-Dabrowska; Jolanta Lissowska; Louise A Brinton; Jan Piotr Gromiec; Slawomir Brzeznicki; Xiaohong R Yang; Mark Sherman; Montserrat García-Closas; Aaron Blair
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2009-10-09       Impact factor: 4.402

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  26 in total

1.  Retrospective benzene exposure assessment for a multi-center case-cohort study of benzene-exposed workers in China.

Authors:  Lützen Portengen; Martha S Linet; Gui-Lan Li; Qing Lan; Graça M Dores; Bu-Tian Ji; Richard B Hayes; Song-Nian Yin; Nathaniel Rothman; Roel Vermeulen
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2015-08-12       Impact factor: 5.563

2.  Developing a job-exposure matrix with exposure uncertainty from expert elicitation and data modeling.

Authors:  Heidi J Fischer; Ximena P Vergara; Michael Yost; Michael Silva; David A Lombardi; Leeka Kheifets
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2015-05-13       Impact factor: 5.563

3.  Contribution of job-exposure matrices for exposure assessment in occupational safety and health monitoring systems: application from the French national occupational disease surveillance and prevention network.

Authors:  Arnaud Florentin; Denis Zmirou-Navier; Christophe Paris
Journal:  Int Arch Occup Environ Health       Date:  2017-03-16       Impact factor: 3.015

4.  Development of Quantitative Estimates of Wood Dust Exposure in a Canadian General Population Job-Exposure Matrix Based on Past Expert Assessments.

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Review 5.  Use and Reliability of Exposure Assessment Methods in Occupational Case-Control Studies in the General Population: Past, Present, and Future.

Authors:  Calvin B Ge; Melissa C Friesen; Hans Kromhout; Susan Peters; Nathaniel Rothman; Qing Lan; Roel Vermeulen
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6.  Sensitivity analyses of exposure estimates from a quantitative job-exposure matrix (SYN-JEM) for use in community-based studies.

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Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg       Date:  2012-07-17

7.  Evaluating predictors of lead exposure for activities disturbing materials painted with or containing lead using historic published data from U.S. workplaces.

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Journal:  Am J Ind Med       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 2.214

Review 8.  Evaluating temporal trends from occupational lead exposure data reported in the published literature using meta-regression.

Authors:  Dong-Hee Koh; Jun-Mo Nam; Barry I Graubard; Yu-Cheng Chen; Sarah J Locke; Melissa C Friesen
Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg       Date:  2014-09-05

9.  Development of a source-exposure matrix for occupational exposure assessment of electromagnetic fields in the INTEROCC study.

Authors:  Javier Vila; Joseph D Bowman; Jordi Figuerola; David Moriña; Laurel Kincl; Lesley Richardson; Elisabeth Cardis
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2016-11-09       Impact factor: 5.563

10.  Characterization of the Selective Recording of Workplace Exposure Measurements into OSHA's IMIS Databank.

Authors:  Philippe Sarazin; Igor Burstyn; Laurel Kincl; Melissa C Friesen; Jérôme Lavoué
Journal:  Ann Work Expo Health       Date:  2018-03-12       Impact factor: 2.179

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