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Author Notes:

E-mail Address : mgoodm2@emory.edu

The views expressed in this publication were developed at a Workshop held in Baltimore Maryland in April, 2013. .

The Steering Committee included: Elaine Cohen Hubal, Ph.D., National Center for Computational Toxicology, U.S. EPA, Judy S. LaKind, Ph.D., LaKind Associates LLC, University of Maryland School of Medicine and Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Enrique F. Schisterman, Ph.D., Division of Epidemiology Statistics and Prevention Research, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development National Institutes of Health, and Justin Teeguarden, PhD, DABT, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

We thank three anonymous reviewers from the U.S. EPA and Health Canada for their thoughtful comments.

Workshop participants or their affiliated organizations received an honorarium (except JSL, ES, GS, JS, JT, Y-MT, RT-V, TA) and travel support (except TA, Y-MT, DB, ES). JSL received support for Workshop development and facilitation; JSL consults to governmental and private sectors.

MG regularly serves as a consultant for the government and for the private sector. No other competing interests are declared.

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Research Funding:

The Workshop was sponsored by Polycarbonate/BPA Global Group of the American Chemistry Council (ACC). ACC was not involved in the design, management, or development of the Workshop or in the preparation or approval of the manuscript

Keywords:

  • BEES-C
  • Biomonitoring
  • Ubiquitous chemicals
  • Short physiologic half-life
  • Evaluation instrument
  • Environmental epidemiology

A proposal for assessing study quality: Biomonitoring, Environmental Epidemiology, and Short-lived Chemicals (BEES-C) instrument

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Journal Title:

Environment International

Volume:

Volume 73

Publisher:

, Pages 195-207

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

The quality of exposure assessment is a major determinant of the overall quality of any environmental epidemiology study. The use of biomonitoring as a tool for assessing exposure to ubiquitous chemicals with short physiologic half-lives began relatively recently. These chemicals present several challenges, including their presence in analytical laboratories and sampling equipment, difficulty in establishing temporal order in cross-sectional studies, short- and long-term variability in exposures and biomarker concentrations, and a paucity of information on the number of measurements required for proper exposure classification. To date, the scientific community has not developed a set of systematic guidelines for designing, implementing and interpreting studies of short-lived chemicals that use biomonitoring as the exposure metric or for evaluating the quality of this type of research for WOE assessments or for peer review of grants or publications. We describe key issues that affect epidemiology studies using biomonitoring data on short-lived chemicals and propose a systematic instrument – the Biomonitoring, Environmental Epidemiology, and Short-lived Chemicals (BEES-C) instrument – for evaluating the quality of research proposals and studies that incorporate biomonitoring data on short-lived chemicals. Quality criteria for three areas considered fundamental to the evaluation of epidemiology studies that include biological measurements of short-lived chemicals are described: 1) biomarker selection and measurement, 2) study design and execution, and 3) general epidemiological study design considerations. We recognize that the development of an evaluative tool such as BEES-C is neither simple nor non-controversial. We hope and anticipate that the instrument will initiate further discussion/debate on this topic.

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© 2014 The Authors.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommerical-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/), which permits making multiple copies, distribution, public display, and publicly performance, provided the original work is properly cited. This license requires credit be given to copyright holder and/or author, copyright and license notices be kept intact. This license prohibits exercising rights for commercial purposes.

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