Literature DB >> 3344753

Relative risk models for assessing the joint effects of multiple factors.

J H Lubin1, W Gaffey.   

Abstract

A goal of analyses of occupational cohort data is the specification of how covariate information relates to age-specific disease risks. In describing this relationship, certain assumptions or models must be defined. For example, the usual standardized mortality ratio assumes a constant multiplicative increase in the age and calendar period disease rates of an exposed cohort over rates in a unexposed referent group. For analyzing several exposures, some of which may be continuous, such as cumulative dose, dose rate, duration of employment, and smoking patterns, or for analyzing complex associations between disease rate and covariates, flexible regression procedures are required. Using a crossclassification of the data and a Poisson probability model, relative risk regression methods are outlined. Breslow and Storer [1985], Guerrero and Johnson [1982], and Thomas [1981] propose general models for the relative risk as alternatives to, but which include, the usual exponential form. We review these models, discuss some limitations (in particular when there is more than one covariate) and present alternatives. Methods and models are illustrated by examining the joint effects of radon exposure and tobacco use on lung cancer mortality among a group of uranium miners.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3344753     DOI: 10.1002/ajim.4700130110

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Ind Med        ISSN: 0271-3586            Impact factor:   2.214


  4 in total

1.  Combined effect of silica dust and tobacco smoking on mortality from chronic obstructive lung disease in gold miners.

Authors:  E Hnizdo
Journal:  Br J Ind Med       Date:  1990-10

2.  Silica exposure, silicosis, and lung cancer: a mortality study of South African gold miners.

Authors:  E Hnizdo; G K Sluis-Cremer
Journal:  Br J Ind Med       Date:  1991-01

3.  A hybrid likelihood algorithm for risk modelling.

Authors:  A M Kellerer; M Kreisheimer; D Chmelevsky; D Barclay
Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys       Date:  1995-03       Impact factor: 1.925

Review 4.  Models for the analysis of radon-exposed populations.

Authors:  J H Lubin
Journal:  Yale J Biol Med       Date:  1988 May-Jun
  4 in total

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