4.7 Review

Elements to increase translation in pyrethroid epidemiology research: A review

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 813, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152568

Keywords

Pyrethroids; Epidemiology; Biomonitoring; Exposure assessment; Risk assessment; Translation; Matrix

Funding

  1. PyrethroidWorking Group (PWG)

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This study reviewed the epidemiology literature on pyrethroid insecticides and evaluated the methodological elements for their relevance in risk assessment and decision-making. The results showed that only a small portion of the studies met the requirements for risk assessment, indicating the opportunity for future research to incorporate more translational approaches.
Pyrethroid insecticides have been the subject of numerous epidemiology studies in the past two decades. We examined the pyrethroids epidemiology literature published between 2016 and 2021. Our objective with this exercise was to in-form interested readers regarding information on methodological elements that strengthen a study's use for translation (i.e., use in risk assessment) and to describe aspects of future research methods that could improve utility for decision-making. We focused on the following elements: (i) study design that provided evidence that pyrethroid exposure preceded the outcome, (ii) evidence that the method used for exposure characterization was reliable and sufficiently accurate for the intended purpose, and (iii) use of a robust approach for outcome ascertainment. For each of the 74 studies identified via the literature search, we categorized the methodological elements as Acceptable or Supplemental. A study with three Acceptable elements was considered Relevant for risk assessment purposes. Based on our evaluative approach, 18 (24%) of the 74 publications were considered to be Relevant. These publications were categorized as Acceptable for all three elements assessed: confirmed exposure (N = 24), confirmed outcome (N = 64), exposure preceded the outcome (N = 44). Three of these studies were birth cohorts. There were 15 Relevant publications of adults which included 10 Agricultural Health Study cohort publications of self-reported permethrin. Overall, the majority of the reviewed studies used methods that did not permit a determination that pyrethroid expo -sure preceded the outcome, and/or did not utilize robust methods for exposure assessment and outcome ascertain-ment. There is an opportunity for investigators and research sponsors to build on the studies reviewed here and to incorporate more translational approaches to studying exposure/outcome associations related to pesticides and other chemicals.

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