Individual, environmental, and meteorological predictors of daily personal ultraviolet radiation exposure measurements in a United States cohort study


Autoria(s): Cahoon, Elizabeth K.; Wheeler, David C.; Kimlin, Michael G.; Kwok, Richard K.; Alexander, Bruce H.; Little, Mark P.; Linet, Martha S.; Freedman, Daryl M.
Data(s)

06/02/2013

Resumo

Background Individual exposure to ultraviolet radiation (UVR) is challenging to measure, particularly for diseases with substantial latency periods between first exposure and diagnosis of outcome, such as cancer. To guide the choice of surrogates for long-term UVR exposure in epidemiologic studies, we assessed how well stable sun-related individual characteristics and environmental/meteorological factors predicted daily personal UVR exposure measurements. Methods We evaluated 123 United States Radiologic Technologists subjects who wore personal UVR dosimeters for 8 hours daily for up to 7 days (N = 837 days). Potential predictors of personal UVR derived from a self-administered questionnaire, and public databases that provided daily estimates of ambient UVR and weather conditions. Factors potentially related to personal UVR exposure were tested individually and in a model including all significant variables. Results The strongest predictors of daily personal UVR exposure in the full model were ambient UVR, latitude, daily rainfall, and skin reaction to prolonged sunlight (R2 = 0.30). In a model containing only environmental and meteorological variables, ambient UVR, latitude, and daily rainfall were the strongest predictors of daily personal UVR exposure (R2 = 0.25). Conclusions In the absence of feasible measures of individual longitudinal sun exposure history, stable personal characteristics, ambient UVR, and weather parameters may help estimate long-term personal UVR exposure.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/59520/

Publicador

Public Library of Science

Relação

http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0054983

Cahoon, Elizabeth K., Wheeler, David C. , Kimlin, Michael G., Kwok, Richard K., Alexander, Bruce H., Little, Mark P., Linet, Martha S., & Freedman, Daryl M. (2013) Individual, environmental, and meteorological predictors of daily personal ultraviolet radiation exposure measurements in a United States cohort study. PLoS ONE, 8(2).

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Public Health & Social Work

Palavras-Chave #110000 MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES #111700 PUBLIC HEALTH AND HEALTH SERVICES #Cancer-mortality rates #Sun exposure #Vitamin-D #Radiologic Technologists #Measurement Error #Ocular melanoma #Skin #Risk #Reproducibility #Population
Tipo

Journal Article