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Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.

Methodological issues in the design of prospective, longitudinal studies of developmental neurotoxicity in humans are reviewed. A comprehensive assessment of potential confounding influences is important in these studies because inadequate assessment of confounders can threaten the validity of causa...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jacobson, J L, Jacobson, S W
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1469580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9182034
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author Jacobson, J L
Jacobson, S W
author_facet Jacobson, J L
Jacobson, S W
author_sort Jacobson, J L
collection PubMed
description Methodological issues in the design of prospective, longitudinal studies of developmental neurotoxicity in humans are reviewed. A comprehensive assessment of potential confounding influences is important in these studies because inadequate assessment of confounders can threaten the validity of causal inferences drawn from the data. Potential confounders typically include demographic background variables, alcohol and smoking during pregnancy, the quality of parental stimulation, the child's age at test, and the examiner. Exposure to other substances is assessed where significant exposure is expected in the target population. In most studies, control variables even weakly related to outcome are included in all multivariate statistical analyses, and a toxic effect is inferred only if the effect of exposure is significant after controlling for the potential confounders. Once a neurotoxic effect has been identified, suspected mediating variables may be added to the analysis to examine underlying processes or mechanisms through which the exposure may impact on developmental outcome. Individual differences in vulnerability may be examined in terms of either an additive compensatory model or a synergistic "risk and resilience" approach. Failure to detect real effects (Type II error) is of particular concern in these studies because public policy considerations make it likely that negative findings will be interpreted to mean that the exposure is safe. Important sources of Type II error include inadequate representation of highly exposed individuals, overcontrol for confounders, and inappropriate correction for multiple comparisons. Given the high cost and complexity of prospective, longitudinal investigations, cross-sectional pilot studies focusing on highly exposed individuals can be valuable for the initial identification of salient domains of impairment.
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spelling pubmed-14695802006-06-01 Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity. Jacobson, J L Jacobson, S W Environ Health Perspect Research Article Methodological issues in the design of prospective, longitudinal studies of developmental neurotoxicity in humans are reviewed. A comprehensive assessment of potential confounding influences is important in these studies because inadequate assessment of confounders can threaten the validity of causal inferences drawn from the data. Potential confounders typically include demographic background variables, alcohol and smoking during pregnancy, the quality of parental stimulation, the child's age at test, and the examiner. Exposure to other substances is assessed where significant exposure is expected in the target population. In most studies, control variables even weakly related to outcome are included in all multivariate statistical analyses, and a toxic effect is inferred only if the effect of exposure is significant after controlling for the potential confounders. Once a neurotoxic effect has been identified, suspected mediating variables may be added to the analysis to examine underlying processes or mechanisms through which the exposure may impact on developmental outcome. Individual differences in vulnerability may be examined in terms of either an additive compensatory model or a synergistic "risk and resilience" approach. Failure to detect real effects (Type II error) is of particular concern in these studies because public policy considerations make it likely that negative findings will be interpreted to mean that the exposure is safe. Important sources of Type II error include inadequate representation of highly exposed individuals, overcontrol for confounders, and inappropriate correction for multiple comparisons. Given the high cost and complexity of prospective, longitudinal investigations, cross-sectional pilot studies focusing on highly exposed individuals can be valuable for the initial identification of salient domains of impairment. 1996-04 /pmc/articles/PMC1469580/ /pubmed/9182034 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Jacobson, J L
Jacobson, S W
Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.
title Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.
title_full Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.
title_fullStr Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.
title_full_unstemmed Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.
title_short Prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.
title_sort prospective, longitudinal assessment of developmental neurotoxicity.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1469580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9182034
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