Statistical methods for epidemiologic studies of the health effects of air pollution.

We describe two statistical designs that can provide efficient estimates of the health effects of exposure to air pollutants in epidemiologic studies. We also evaluate the effects of measurement error in exposure assessment on the accuracy of estimated health effects. The bidirectional case-crossover design is a variant of a method proposed by Maclure (1991). Our version of the method takes advantage of the fact that in epidemiologic studies involving environmental exposure, accurate information about past exposure is more readily available, and that levels of exposure are generally unaffected by the response of the subject. It differs from other case-crossover methods in that control information is assessed both before and after failure, thus avoiding confounding due to time trends in exposure. The multilevel analytic design provides a method of combining estimates of health effects made on the individual level with those made at the group level. It has great potential value in situations where variations in exposure within groups may not be great enough to provide adequate power to detect health effects, as is often the case in air pollution studies where exposure levels are similar within a geographic community. Measurement errors in exposure assessment can have substantial impact on the accuracy of estimated health effects. When the microenvironmental approach is used to estimate exposure, a standard error of 30% in estimating indoor/outdoor ratios can increase the standard error of a relative risk estimate by 50%, and introduce bias as well. Similar results hold when exposure is estimated with personal samplers. When the microenvironmental approach is used, errors in estimating indoor/outdoor ratios have more influence on the accuracy of risk estimation than do errors in estimating the time spent in microenvironments.

[1]  S Greenland,et al.  Ecological bias, confounding, and effect modification. , 1989, International journal of epidemiology.

[2]  M. Segal,et al.  Methods development for epidemiologic investigations of the health effects of prolonged ozone exposure. Part II. An approach to retrospective estimation of lifetime ozone exposure using a questionnaire and ambient monitoring data (California sites). , 1998, Research report.

[3]  T. Koepsell,et al.  Multi-level analysis in epidemiologic research on health behaviors and outcomes. , 1992, American journal of epidemiology.

[4]  E. Rappaport,et al.  Acute effects of ambient ozone on asthmatic, wheezy, and healthy children. , 1998, Research report.

[5]  R L Prentice,et al.  Methodologic research needs in environmental epidemiology: data analysis. , 1993, Environmental health perspectives.

[6]  J. Robins,et al.  Control sampling strategies for case-crossover studies: an assessment of relative efficiency. , 1995, American journal of epidemiology.

[7]  S Greenland,et al.  Confounding and Exposure Trends in Case‐Crossover and Case‐Time‐Control Designs , 1996, Epidemiology.

[8]  P. Kinney,et al.  Methods development for epidemiologic investigations of the health effects of prolonged ozone exposure. Part III. An approach to retrospective estimation of lifetime ozone exposure using a questionnaire and ambient monitoring data (U.S. sites). , 1998, Research report.

[9]  H. Morgenstern,et al.  Principles of study design in environmental epidemiology. , 1993 .

[10]  D. Thomas,et al.  Exposure measurement error: influence on exposure-disease. Relationships and methods of correction. , 1993, Annual review of public health.

[11]  C. Shy,et al.  Ozone exposure and daily mortality in Mexico City: a time-series analysis. , 1996, Research report.

[12]  R J Marshall,et al.  Analysis of case-crossover designs. , 1993, Statistics in medicine.

[13]  N. Künzli,et al.  Methods development for epidemiologic investigations of the health effects of prolonged ozone exposure. Part I: Variability of pulmonary function measures. , 1998, Research report.

[14]  B G Armstrong,et al.  The effects of measurement errors on relative risk regressions. , 1990, American journal of epidemiology.

[15]  U Feldmann,et al.  Epidemiologic assessment of risks of adverse reactions associated with intermittent exposure. , 1993, Biometrics.

[16]  H. Goldstein Multilevel Statistical Models , 2006 .

[17]  D. Thomas,et al.  Measurement issues in environmental epidemiology. , 1993, Environmental health perspectives.

[18]  M. Maclure The case-crossover design: a method for studying transient effects on the risk of acute events. , 1991, American journal of epidemiology.