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A Distributional Approach to Characterizing Low-Dose Cancer Risk
Authors:John S. Evans  John D. Graham  George M. Gray  Robert L. Sielken  Jr.
Affiliation:Interdisciplinary Programs in Health, Harvard School of Public Health, 665 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.;Center for Risk Analysis, Harvard School of Public Health, 677 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.;Sielken, Inc., Suite 230, 3833 Texas Avenue, Bryan, Texas 77802.
Abstract:Since cancer risk at very low doses cannot be directly measured in humans or animals, mathematical extrapolation models and scientific judgment are required. This article demonstrates a probabilistic approach to carcinogen risk assessment that employs probability trees, subjective probabilities, and standard bootstrapping procedures. The probabilistic approach is applied to the carcinogenic risk of formaldehyde in environmental and occupational settings. Sensitivity analyses illustrate conditional estimates of risk for each path in the probability tree. Fundamental mechanistic uncertainties are characterized. A strength of the analysis is the explicit treatment of alternative beliefs about pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. The resulting probability distributions on cancer risk are compared with the point estimates reported by federal agencies. Limitations of the approach are discussed as well as future research directions.
Keywords:Distributional analysis    probability tree    carcinogen risk assessment
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