rss
Occup Environ Med doi:10.1136/oem.2006.031369

Reducing healthy worker survivor bias by restricting date of hire in a cohort study of Vermont granite workers

  1. Ellen A Eisen (eeisen{at}hsph.harvard.edu)
  1. Harvard School of Public Health, United States
    • Published Online First 20 April 2007

    Abstract

    Objective: Explore the healthy worker survivor effect (HWSE) in a study of Vermont granite workers by distinguishing ‘prevalent’ from ‘incident’ hires based on date of hire before or after the start of follow-up. Methods: Records of workers between 1950 and 1982 were obtained from a medical surveillance program. Proportional hazards models were used to model the association between silica exposure and lung cancer mortality, with penalized splines used to smooth the exposure-response relationship. A sensitivity analysis compared results between the original cohort and sub-cohorts defined by restricting date of hire to include varying proportions of prevalent hires. Results: Restricting to incident hires reduced the 213 cases by 74% and decreased the exposure range,. The maximum mortality rate ratio (MRR) was close to 2-fold in all sub-cohorts. However, the exposure at which the maximum MRR was achieved decreased from 4.0 to 0.6 mg-yr/m3 as the proportion of prevalent hires decreased from 50% in the original cohort to 0% in the sub-cohort of incident hires. Conclusion: Despite loss in power and restricted exposure range, decreasing the relative proportion of prevalent to incident hires reduced HWSE bias, resulting in stronger evidence for a dose-response between silica exposure and lung cancer mortality.

    This Article

    1. All Versions of this Article:
      1. oem.2006.031369v1
      2. oem.2006.031369v2
      3. oem.2006.031369v3
      4. 64/10/681 most recent

    Services

    1. Request permissions

    Responses

    1. Submit a response
    2. No responses published

    Social bookmarking

    Register for free content


    Free sample
    This recent issue is free to all users to allow everyone the opportunity to see the full scope and typical content of OEM.
    View free sample issue >>

    Free archive
    The full back archive is now available for OEM. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006, back to volume 1 issue 1.
    Register to access the free archive >>

    Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.