Abstract

BackgroundThe associations of pesticide exposure with disease outcomes are estimated without the benefit of a randomized design. For this reason and others, these studies are susceptible to systematic errors. I analyzed studies of the associations between alachlor and glyphosate exposure and cancer incidence, both derived from the Agricultural Health Study cohort, to quantify the bias and uncertainty potentially attributable to systematic error.MethodsFor each study, I identified the prominent result and important sources of systematic error that might affect it. I assigned probability distributions to the bias parameters that allow quantification of the bias, drew a value at random from each assigned distribution, and calculated the estimate of effect adjusted for the biases. By repeating the draw and adjustment process over multiple iterations, I generated a frequency distribution of adjusted results, from which I obtained a point estimate and simulation interval. These methods were applied without access to the primary record-level dataset.ResultsThe conventional estimates of effect associating alachlor and glyphosate exposure with cancer incidence were likely biased away from the null and understated the uncertainty by quantifying only random error. For example, the conventional p-value for a test of trend in the alachlor study equaled 0.02, whereas fewer than 20% of the bias analysis iterations yielded a p-value of 0.02 or lower. Similarly, the conventional fully-adjusted result associating glyphosate exposure with multiple myleoma equaled 2.6 with 95% confidence interval of 0.7 to 9.4. The frequency distribution generated by the bias analysis yielded a median hazard ratio equal to 1.5 with 95% simulation interval of 0.4 to 8.9, which was 66% wider than the conventional interval.ConclusionBias analysis provides a more complete picture of true uncertainty than conventional frequentist statistical analysis accompanied by a qualitative description of study limitations. The latter approach is likely to lead to overconfidence regarding the potential for causal associations, whereas the former safeguards against such overinterpretations. Furthermore, such analyses, once programmed, allow rapid implementation of alternative assignments of probability distributions to the bias parameters, so elevate the plane of discussion regarding study bias from characterizing studies as "valid" or "invalid" to a critical and quantitative discussion of sources of uncertainty.

Highlights

  • The associations of pesticide exposure with disease outcomes are estimated without the benefit of a randomized design

  • When studies are designed without the benefit of randomized exposure assignment, conventional frequentist statistics underestimate the true uncertainty in an estimate of association

  • Despite qualitative descriptions of study limitations, the conventional frequentist statistics will often lead to overconfidence about the reported result and a tendency toward favoring the causal explanation for an association over bias explanations [10]

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Summary

Introduction

The associations of pesticide exposure with disease outcomes are estimated without the benefit of a randomized design For this reason and others, these studies are susceptible to systematic errors. I analyzed studies of the associations between alachlor and glyphosate exposure and cancer incidence, both derived from the Agricultural Health Study cohort, to quantify the bias and uncertainty potentially attributable to systematic error. The Agricultural Health Study (AHS) enrolled 57,311 applicators licensed to apply restricted use pesticides into a large prospective cohort study between 1993 and 1997. Cohort members who emigrated from the enrollment states were identified using records of the Internal Revenue Service, motor vehicle registries, and registries of pesticide applicators maintained by the state agricultural departments. Among alachlor-exposed applicators, the authors reported an increasing trend for incidence of all lymphohaematopoietic cancers associated with cumulative exposure.

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