When Work is Related to Disease, What Establishes Evidence for a Causal Relation?

Establishing a causal relationship between factors at work and disease is difficult for occupational physicians and researchers. This paper seeks to provide arguments for the judgement of evidence of causality in observational studies that relate work factors to disease. I derived criteria for the judgement of evidence of causality from the following sources: the criteria list of Hill, the approach by Rothman, the methods used by International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), and methods used by epidemiologists. The criteria are applied to two cases of putative occupational diseases; breast cancer caused by shift work and aerotoxic syndrome. Only three of the Hill criteria can be applied to an actual study. Rothman stresses the importance of confounding and alternative explanations than the putative cause. IARC closely follows Hill, but they also incorporate other than epidemiological evidence. Applied to shift work and breast cancer, these results have found moderate evidence for a causal relationship, but applied to the aerotoxic syndrome, there is an absence of evidence of causality. There are no ready to use algorithms for judgement of evidence of causality. Criteria from different sources lead to similar results and can make a conclusion of causality more or less likely.

[1]  A. B. Hill The Environment and Disease: Association or Causation? , 1965, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[2]  Francine Laden,et al.  Night work and breast cancer risk: a systematic review and meta-analysis. , 2005, European journal of cancer.

[3]  R. Dehart Occupation and Disease: How Social Factors Affect the Conception of Work-Related Disorders , 1997 .

[4]  L. Leach,et al.  The psychosocial quality of work determines whether employment has benefits for mental health: results from a longitudinal national household panel survey , 2011, Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

[5]  K. Straif,et al.  Use of mechanistic data in IARC evaluations , 2008, Environmental and molecular mutagenesis.

[6]  D. Bleyl,et al.  IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. Overall Evaluations of Carcinogenicity: An Updating of IARC Monographs vol. 1 to 42. Supplement 7. 440 Seiten. International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon 1987. Preis: 65, – s.Fr , 1989 .

[7]  I. Hickie,et al.  The chronic fatigue syndrome: a comprehensive approach to its definition and study. International Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Study Group. , 1994, Annals of internal medicine.

[8]  A. Zuckerman,et al.  IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans , 1995, IARC monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risks to humans.

[9]  David L Sackett,et al.  The arrogance of preventive medicine. , 2002, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[10]  D. Sackett,et al.  Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't , 1996, BMJ.

[11]  A. Dembe Emergent Maladies. (Book Reviews: Occupation and Disease. How Social Factors Affect the Conception of Work- Related Disorders.) , 1997 .

[12]  C D Holman,et al.  A Psychometric Experiment in Causal Inference to Estimate Evidential Weights Used by Epidemiologists , 2001, Epidemiology.

[13]  D. Ellingsen,et al.  Organophosphates in aircraft cabin and cockpit air--method development and measurements of contaminants. , 2011, Journal of environmental monitoring : JEM.

[14]  Robert A. Baan,et al.  The Science and Practice of Carcinogen Identification and Evaluation , 2004, Environmental health perspectives.

[15]  F. van Dijk,et al.  Evaluation of occupational disease surveillance in six EU countries. , 2010, Occupational medicine.

[16]  J. Sluiter,et al.  Criteria document for evaluating the work-relatedness of upper-extremity musculoskeletal disorders. , 2001, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[17]  Steven G. Gilbert,et al.  Doubt Is Their Product: How Industry’s Assault on Science Threatens Your Health , 2009, Environmental Health Perspectives.

[18]  Sander Greenland,et al.  Causation and Causal Inference , 2021, International Encyclopedia of Statistical Science.

[19]  G. van der Laan,et al.  THE FATE OF MRS ROBINSON: CRITERIA FOR RECOGNITION OF WHOLE-BODY VIBRATION INJURY AS AN OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE , 2002 .

[20]  Hiroyuki Tsuda,et al.  WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION INTERNATIONAL AGENCY FOR RESEARCH ON CANCER IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans , 2005 .

[21]  M. Dufour,et al.  Epidemiology. Introduction. , 1995, Recent developments in alcoholism : an official publication of the American Medical Society on Alcoholism, the Research Society on Alcoholism, and the National Council on Alcoholism.

[22]  Álvaro Rodríguez-Carballeira,et al.  Categorization and Hierarchy of Workplace Bullying Strategies: A Delphi Survey , 2010, The Spanish journal of psychology.

[23]  Sander Greenland,et al.  Modern Epidemiology 3rd edition , 1986 .

[24]  Ian Hickie,et al.  The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Comprehensive Approach to Its Definition and Study , 1994, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[25]  Jill P Pell,et al.  Parachute use to prevent death and major trauma related to gravitational challenge: systematic review of randomised controlled trials. , 2004, The International journal of prosthodontics.

[26]  Debra A Swoboda Negotiating the diagnostic uncertainty of contested illnesses: physician practices and paradigms , 2008, Health.

[27]  D. Gee Establishing evidence for early action: the prevention of reproductive and developmental harm. , 2008, Basic & clinical pharmacology & toxicology.

[28]  Monique H W Frings-Dresen,et al.  Considerations of circadian impact for defining ‘shift work’ in cancer studies: IARC Working Group Report , 2010, Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

[29]  Jared W. Allen Hunter's Diseases of Occupations. , 2000, Thorax.