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Citation

Zaganjor, Ibrahim; Keil, Alexander P.; Luben, Thomas J.; Desrosiers, Tania A.; Engel, Lawrence S.; Reefhuis, Jennita; Michalski, Adrian M.; Langlois, Peter H.; & Olshan, Andrew F. (2022). Is Maternal Employment Site a Source of Exposure Misclassification in Studies of Environmental Exposures and Birth Outcomes? A Simulation-Based Bias Analysis of Haloacetic Acids in Tap Water and Hypospadias. Environmental Epidemiology, 6(2), e207. PMCID: PMC9005252

Abstract

BACKGOUND: In population research, exposure to environmental contaminants is often indirectly assessed by linking residence to geocoded databases of environmental exposures. We explored the potential for misclassification of residence-based environmental exposure as a result of not accounting for the workplace environments of employed pregnant women using data from a National Birth Defects Prevention Study (NBDPS) analysis of drinking water haloacetic acids and hypospadias.
METHODS: The original analysis used NBDPS data from women with haloacetic acid exposure information in eight states who delivered an infant with second- or third-degree hypospadias (cases) or a male infant without a birth defect (controls) between 2000 and 2005. In this bias analysis, we used a uniform distribution to randomly select 11%-14% of employed women that were assumed to change municipal water systems between home and work and imputed new contaminant exposures for tap water beverages consumed at work among the selected women using resampled values from the control population. Multivariable logistic regression was used to estimate the association between hypospadias and haloacetic acid ingestion with the same covariates and exposure cut-points as the original study. We repeated this process across 10,000 iterations and then completed a sensitivity analysis of an additional 10,000 iterations where we expanded the uniform distribution (i.e., 0%, 28%).
RESULTS: In both simulations, the average results of the 10,000 iterations were nearly identical to those of the initial study.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that household estimates may be sufficient proxies for worksite exposures to haloacetic acids in tap water.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ee9.0000000000000207

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Environmental Epidemiology

Author(s)

Zaganjor, Ibrahim
Keil, Alexander P.
Luben, Thomas J.
Desrosiers, Tania A.
Engel, Lawrence S.
Reefhuis, Jennita
Michalski, Adrian M.
Langlois, Peter H.
Olshan, Andrew F.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9005252

Data Set/Study

National Birth Defects Prevention Study (NBDPS)

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

Sex/Gender

Women

ORCiD

Olshan - 0000-0001-9115-5128