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Department of Statistics, The Ohio State University
Statistics and Biostatistics Colloquium Series
Jointly sponsored by the School of Public Health and
Department of Statistics
BERYLLIUM AND LUNG CANCER: Design and analysis issues raised
in a re-examination and re-analysis of two major epidemiological
studies conducted by NIOSH
Paul Levy
RTI International
12:30PM - Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Room M-008, Starling-Loving Hall (SL M-008)
ABSTRACT
This talk is based on Levy PS, Roth HD, Deubner DC. (2007) Exposure
to beryllium and occurrence of lung cancer: a reexamination of findings
from a nested case-control study. J Occup Environ Med. 49(1):96-101.
OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to reanalyze a nested case-control study of
beryllium and lung cancer because we identified analysis and study
design issues that could have led to the elevated odds ratios obtained
in the study.
METHODS: We reanalyzed the data using nontransformed exposure
metrics instead of log-transformed metrics used in the publication. We
identified and examined effects on estimated odds ratios of imbalances
between cases and controls caused by the control selection method.
RESULTS: This reanalysis found no elevated odds ratios for any
exposure variable.
CONCLUSION:: Our conclusions differ from the authors'
interpretation that the findings are due to a causal relationship
between beryllium exposure and lung cancer. Our alternative explanation
is that they may be due to methodological problems that could have been
controlled by closer matching of controls to cases.
CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: This study challenges conclusions made from a
large case-control study concerning beryllium-lung cancer associations.
Occupational medicine practitioners may want to integrate findings from
this study into advice they give beryllium-exposed workers concerned
about lung cancer.
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