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International Conference on Using Epidemiological Studies in Health Risk Assessments: Relevance, Reliability and Causality

(09.11.2023 - 10.11.2023)

Observational epidemiological studies can provide valuable evidence for health risk assessments in various areas including food and feed safety, chemical and product safety, occupational health, environmental health and animal health.

However, the use of epidemiological data to assess health risks is often not systematic. The presumed inability of observational studies to demonstrate a causal relationship may even lead to their exclusion from the evidence assessment although they may provide valuable evidence for example in a weight-of-evidence approach.
Risk assessors may encounter challenges when using epidemiological data for their assessments. Some of these are related to the approaches for the critical appraisal of the evidence of individual studies. For example, the critical appraisal should consider uncertainties in the methods used to determine exposures, risk factors and outcomes. Uncertainty about the causal nature of an observed association is a central question in the use of epidemiological evidence in health risk assessment.

At this conference, epidemiologists, health statisticians, risk assessors, other users of epidemiological evidence (e.g. toxicologists and nutritionists) as well as risk managers and stakeholders are invited to share and discuss their experiences to promote the use of epidemiological data for health risk assessments.

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Presentation

 (18)
Date Title Size
10.11.2023
Presentation, Barbara Doerr, Food Standards Agency, London, UK
The UK Committees on Toxicity (COT) and on Carcinogenicity (COC) of chemicals in foods, consumer products and the environment: guidance for synthesising and integration of epidemiological and toxicological evidence 623.4 KB
PDF-File
10.11.2023
Presentation, Kristina Plate, BfR, Berlin, Germany
A tool for rapid assessment of risk of bias (raRoB) in observational epidemiologic studies 1.8 MB
PDF-File
10.11.2023
Presentation, Krista Y Christensen, Center for Public Health and Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC, USA
Surveying the epidemiology evidence: examples of triangulation from the IRIS program 1.3 MB
PDF-File
10.11.2023
Presentation, Pierre Lebailly, Centre François Baclesse, Caen, France and University of Caen Normandy, France
Epidemiological results on pesticides and cancer, just a matter of p values and confounding? 1.7 MB
PDF-File
10.11.2023
Presentation, Sander Greenland, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Keynote 6: Proper construction and interpretation of statistics for causality assessment and policy input 4.0 MB
-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Janice Hegewald, Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (BAuA), Berlin, Germany
Good practice occupational epidemiological systematic reviews – a recommendation paper
09.11.2023
Presentation, Krista Y. Christensen, US Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, USA
Application feature improvements in support of human health assessments: optimisations for epidemiology data extraction 2.3 MB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Judy LaKind, LaKind Associates, LLC, Catonsville, USA and University of Maryland-School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA
Keynote 1: Epidemiology and risk assessment: reflections on working together to improve public health 901.2 KB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Ullrika Sahlin, Lund University, Sweden
Probability bounds analysis as a way open up for semi-automatic quantification of bias terms in RoB – adjusted evidence synthesis 1.9 MB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Joachim Schüz, International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC/WHO), Lyon, France
Keynote 2: Opportunities and challenges of using epidemiological studies in health risk assessment from an IARC perspective 1.8 MB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Holger Schünemann, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada and Cochrane Canada
Keynote 4: Assessing the certainty in a body of evidence for studies addressing the effect of an exposure on an outcome 7.5 MB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Klaus Abraham, BfR, Berlin, Germany
Diminished semen quality following early exposure to persistent organic pollutants (POPs) as critical effect in health risk assessment? 782.0 KB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Kyla W Taylor, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Durham, USA
The OHAT approach to assessing risk-of-bias in individual epidemiological studies to support evidence integration and public health decision making 1.5 MB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Erica Kintz, Food Standards Agency, London, UK
Use of epidemiological data in microbiological risk assessments: two case studies from the UK Food Standards Agency 1.4 MB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Christine L Parr, Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food and Environment (VKM), Oslo, Norway
Use of epidemiological studies in a benefit and risk assessment of fish intake by the Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food and Environment (VKM) 894.3 KB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Perrine Nadaud, French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety, Maisons-Alfort, France
Use of epidemiological studies to assess nutritional risk of vegetarian diets 1.4 MB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Sylvia Notenboom, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The Netherlands
Notes on the use of epidemiological and toxicological data for risk assessment 662.8 KB
PDF-File
09.11.2023
Presentation, Julian PT Higgins, Bristol Medical School, UK
Keynote 3: Assessing risk of bias in estimates of the effects of exposures: the ROBINS-E tool 2.3 MB
PDF-File

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Abstracts

 (1)
Date Title Size
09.11.2023
Abstracts
International Conference on Using Epidemiological Studies in Health Risk Assessments: Relevance, Reliability and Causality 355.9 KB
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Programme

 (1)
Date Title Size
09.11.2023
Programme
Using Epidemiological Studies in Health Risk Assessments: Relevance, Reliability and Causality 1.7 MB
PDF-File

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