Abstract

BackgroundSystematic reviews are increasingly prevalent in environmental health due to their ability to synthesize evidence while reducing bias. Different systematic review methods have been developed by the US National Toxicology Program’s Office of Health Assessment and Translation (OHAT), the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS), and by the US EPA under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), including the approach to assess risk of bias (ROB), one of the most vital steps which is used to evaluate internal validity of the studies. Our objective was to compare the performance of three tools (OHAT, IRIS, TSCA) in assessing ROB.MethodsWe selected a systematic review on polybrominated diphenyl ethers and intelligence quotient and/or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder because it had been endorsed by the National Academy of Sciences. Two reviewers followed verbatim instructions from the tools and independently applied each tool to assess ROB in 15 studies previously identified. We documented the time to apply each tool and the impact the ROB ratings for each tool had on the final rating of the quality of the overall body of evidence.ResultsThe time to complete the ROB assessments varied widely (mean = 20, 32, and 40 min per study for the OHAT, IRIS, and TSCA tools, respectively). All studies were rated overall “low” or “uninformative” using IRIS, due to “deficient” or “critically deficient” ratings in one or two domains. Similarly, all studies were rated “unacceptable” using the TSCA tool because of one “unacceptable” rating in a metric related to statistical power. Approximately half of the studies had “low” or “probably low ROB” ratings across all domains with the OHAT and Navigation Guide tools.ConclusionsTools that use overall ROB or study quality ratings, such as IRIS and TSCA, may reduce the available evidence to assess the harms of environmental exposures by erroneously excluding studies, which leads to inaccurate conclusions about the quality of the body of evidence. We recommend using ROB tools that circumvents these issues, such as OHAT and Navigation Guide.Systematic review registrationThis review has not been registered as it is not a systematic review.

Highlights

  • Systematic reviews are increasingly prevalent in environmental health due to their ability to synthesize evidence while reducing bias

  • Numerous tools exist to assess risk of bias (ROB), we focused on the OHAT [7], Information System (IRIS) [4], and Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) [8] tools in our review because they are currently in use by the US government (NTP, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)), and routinely applied for assessing risks from environmental chemicals

  • Similarities and differences across tools We found consistent ratings across the Navigation Guide, OHAT, IRIS, and TSCA tools for the domains of exposure characterization, outcome measurement, and confounding (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Systematic reviews are increasingly prevalent in environmental health due to their ability to synthesize evidence while reducing bias. Different systematic review methods have been developed by the US National Toxicology Program’s Office of Health Assessment and Translation (OHAT), the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS), and by the US EPA under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), including the approach to assess risk of bias (ROB), one of the most vital steps which is used to evaluate internal validity of the studies. Different systematic review methods have been developed and implemented by various US authoritative bodies and agencies including the National Toxicology Program (NTP)’s Office of Health Assessment and Translation (OHAT) [7], Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)’s Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) [4], and by EPA under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) [8] to inform environmental health decisions that have major implications for public health. An important benefit of these tools is that they are designed for evaluating studies of environmental exposures, eliminating the translation required from more generic tools applied in clinical medicine [4]

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