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Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury

BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Labour Organization (ILO) have produced the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury (WHO/ILO Joint Estimates). For these, systematic reviews of studies estimating the prevalence of exposure to sele...

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Autores principales: Pega, Frank, Momen, Natalie C., Gagliardi, Diana, Bero, Lisa A., Boccuni, Fabio, Chartres, Nicholas, Descatha, Alexis, Dzhambov, Angel M., Godderis, Lode, Loney, Tom, Mandrioli, Daniele, Modenese, Alberto, van der Molen, Henk F., Morgan, Rebecca L., Neupane, Subas, Pachito, Daniela, Paulo, Marilia S., Prakash, K.C., Scheepers, Paul T.J., Teixeira, Liliane, Tenkate, Thomas, Woodruff, Tracey J., Norris, Susan L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8885428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35182944
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2022.107136
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author Pega, Frank
Momen, Natalie C.
Gagliardi, Diana
Bero, Lisa A.
Boccuni, Fabio
Chartres, Nicholas
Descatha, Alexis
Dzhambov, Angel M.
Godderis, Lode
Loney, Tom
Mandrioli, Daniele
Modenese, Alberto
van der Molen, Henk F.
Morgan, Rebecca L.
Neupane, Subas
Pachito, Daniela
Paulo, Marilia S.
Prakash, K.C.
Scheepers, Paul T.J.
Teixeira, Liliane
Tenkate, Thomas
Woodruff, Tracey J.
Norris, Susan L.
author_facet Pega, Frank
Momen, Natalie C.
Gagliardi, Diana
Bero, Lisa A.
Boccuni, Fabio
Chartres, Nicholas
Descatha, Alexis
Dzhambov, Angel M.
Godderis, Lode
Loney, Tom
Mandrioli, Daniele
Modenese, Alberto
van der Molen, Henk F.
Morgan, Rebecca L.
Neupane, Subas
Pachito, Daniela
Paulo, Marilia S.
Prakash, K.C.
Scheepers, Paul T.J.
Teixeira, Liliane
Tenkate, Thomas
Woodruff, Tracey J.
Norris, Susan L.
author_sort Pega, Frank
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Labour Organization (ILO) have produced the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury (WHO/ILO Joint Estimates). For these, systematic reviews of studies estimating the prevalence of exposure to selected occupational risk factors have been conducted to provide input data for estimations of the number of exposed workers. A critical part of systematic review methodology is to assess the quality of evidence across studies. In this article, we present the approach applied in these WHO/ILO systematic reviews for performing such assessments on studies of prevalence of exposure. It is called the Quality of Evidence in Studies estimating Prevalence of Exposure to Occupational risk factors (QoE-SPEO) approach. We describe QoE-SPEO’s development to date, demonstrate its feasibility reporting results from pilot testing and case studies, note its strengths and limitations, and suggest how QoE-SPEO should be tested and developed further. METHODS: Following a comprehensive literature review, and using expert opinion, selected existing quality of evidence assessment approaches used in environmental and occupational health were reviewed and analysed for their relevance to prevalence studies. Relevant steps and components from the existing approaches were adopted or adapted for QoE-SPEO. New steps and components were developed. We elicited feedback from other systematic review methodologists and exposure scientists and reached consensus on the QoE-SPEO approach. Ten individual experts pilot-tested QoE-SPEO. To assess inter-rater agreement, we counted ratings of expected (actual and non-spurious) heterogeneity and quality of evidence and calculated a raw measure of agreement (P(i)) between individual raters and rater teams for the downgrade domains. P(i) ranged between 0.00 (no two pilot testers selected the same rating) and 1.00 (all pilot testers selected the same rating). Case studies were conducted of experiences of QoE-SPEO’s use in two WHO/ILO systematic reviews. RESULTS: We found no existing quality of evidence assessment approach for occupational exposure prevalence studies. We identified three relevant, existing approaches for environmental and occupational health studies of the effect of exposures. Assessments using QoE-SPEO comprise three steps: (1) judge the level of expected heterogeneity (defined as non-spurious variability that can be expected in exposure prevalence, within or between individual persons, because exposure may change over space and/or time), (2) assess downgrade domains, and (3) reach a final rating on the quality of evidence. Assessments are conducted using the same five downgrade domains as the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach: (a) risk of bias, (b) indirectness, (c) inconsistency, (d) imprecision, and (e) publication bias. For downgrade domains (c) and (d), the assessment varies depending on the level of expected heterogeneity. There are no upgrade domains. The QoE-SPEO’s ratings are “very low”, “low”, “moderate”, and “high”. To arrive at a final decision on the overall quality of evidence, the assessor starts at “high” quality of evidence and for each domain downgrades by one or two levels for serious concerns or very serious concerns, respectively. In pilot tests, there was reasonable agreement in ratings for expected heterogeneity; 70% of raters selected the same rating. Inter-rater agreement ranged considerably between downgrade domains, both for individual rater pairs (range P(i): 0.36–1.00) and rater teams (0.20–1.00). Sparse data prevented rigorous assessment of inter-rater agreement in quality of evidence ratings. CONCLUSIONS: We present QoE-SPEO as an approach for assessing quality of evidence in prevalence studies of exposure to occupational risk factors. It has been developed to its current version (as presented here), has undergone pilot testing, and was applied in the systematic reviews for the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates. While the approach requires further testing and development, it makes steps towards filling an identified gap, and progress made so far can be used to inform future work in this area.
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spelling pubmed-88854282022-03-02 Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury Pega, Frank Momen, Natalie C. Gagliardi, Diana Bero, Lisa A. Boccuni, Fabio Chartres, Nicholas Descatha, Alexis Dzhambov, Angel M. Godderis, Lode Loney, Tom Mandrioli, Daniele Modenese, Alberto van der Molen, Henk F. Morgan, Rebecca L. Neupane, Subas Pachito, Daniela Paulo, Marilia S. Prakash, K.C. Scheepers, Paul T.J. Teixeira, Liliane Tenkate, Thomas Woodruff, Tracey J. Norris, Susan L. Environ Int Article BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Labour Organization (ILO) have produced the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury (WHO/ILO Joint Estimates). For these, systematic reviews of studies estimating the prevalence of exposure to selected occupational risk factors have been conducted to provide input data for estimations of the number of exposed workers. A critical part of systematic review methodology is to assess the quality of evidence across studies. In this article, we present the approach applied in these WHO/ILO systematic reviews for performing such assessments on studies of prevalence of exposure. It is called the Quality of Evidence in Studies estimating Prevalence of Exposure to Occupational risk factors (QoE-SPEO) approach. We describe QoE-SPEO’s development to date, demonstrate its feasibility reporting results from pilot testing and case studies, note its strengths and limitations, and suggest how QoE-SPEO should be tested and developed further. METHODS: Following a comprehensive literature review, and using expert opinion, selected existing quality of evidence assessment approaches used in environmental and occupational health were reviewed and analysed for their relevance to prevalence studies. Relevant steps and components from the existing approaches were adopted or adapted for QoE-SPEO. New steps and components were developed. We elicited feedback from other systematic review methodologists and exposure scientists and reached consensus on the QoE-SPEO approach. Ten individual experts pilot-tested QoE-SPEO. To assess inter-rater agreement, we counted ratings of expected (actual and non-spurious) heterogeneity and quality of evidence and calculated a raw measure of agreement (P(i)) between individual raters and rater teams for the downgrade domains. P(i) ranged between 0.00 (no two pilot testers selected the same rating) and 1.00 (all pilot testers selected the same rating). Case studies were conducted of experiences of QoE-SPEO’s use in two WHO/ILO systematic reviews. RESULTS: We found no existing quality of evidence assessment approach for occupational exposure prevalence studies. We identified three relevant, existing approaches for environmental and occupational health studies of the effect of exposures. Assessments using QoE-SPEO comprise three steps: (1) judge the level of expected heterogeneity (defined as non-spurious variability that can be expected in exposure prevalence, within or between individual persons, because exposure may change over space and/or time), (2) assess downgrade domains, and (3) reach a final rating on the quality of evidence. Assessments are conducted using the same five downgrade domains as the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach: (a) risk of bias, (b) indirectness, (c) inconsistency, (d) imprecision, and (e) publication bias. For downgrade domains (c) and (d), the assessment varies depending on the level of expected heterogeneity. There are no upgrade domains. The QoE-SPEO’s ratings are “very low”, “low”, “moderate”, and “high”. To arrive at a final decision on the overall quality of evidence, the assessor starts at “high” quality of evidence and for each domain downgrades by one or two levels for serious concerns or very serious concerns, respectively. In pilot tests, there was reasonable agreement in ratings for expected heterogeneity; 70% of raters selected the same rating. Inter-rater agreement ranged considerably between downgrade domains, both for individual rater pairs (range P(i): 0.36–1.00) and rater teams (0.20–1.00). Sparse data prevented rigorous assessment of inter-rater agreement in quality of evidence ratings. CONCLUSIONS: We present QoE-SPEO as an approach for assessing quality of evidence in prevalence studies of exposure to occupational risk factors. It has been developed to its current version (as presented here), has undergone pilot testing, and was applied in the systematic reviews for the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates. While the approach requires further testing and development, it makes steps towards filling an identified gap, and progress made so far can be used to inform future work in this area. Elsevier Science 2022-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8885428/ /pubmed/35182944 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2022.107136 Text en © 2022 Published by Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Pega, Frank
Momen, Natalie C.
Gagliardi, Diana
Bero, Lisa A.
Boccuni, Fabio
Chartres, Nicholas
Descatha, Alexis
Dzhambov, Angel M.
Godderis, Lode
Loney, Tom
Mandrioli, Daniele
Modenese, Alberto
van der Molen, Henk F.
Morgan, Rebecca L.
Neupane, Subas
Pachito, Daniela
Paulo, Marilia S.
Prakash, K.C.
Scheepers, Paul T.J.
Teixeira, Liliane
Tenkate, Thomas
Woodruff, Tracey J.
Norris, Susan L.
Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury
title Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury
title_full Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury
title_fullStr Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury
title_short Assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: The QoE-SPEO approach applied in the systematic reviews from the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related burden of disease and Injury
title_sort assessing the quality of evidence in studies estimating prevalence of exposure to occupational risk factors: the qoe-speo approach applied in the systematic reviews from the who/ilo joint estimates of the work-related burden of disease and injury
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8885428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35182944
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2022.107136
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