Article

Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology (2008) 18, 175–182; doi:10.1038/sj.jes.7500578; published online 25 April 2007

Expert assessment of exposure to carcinogens in Norway's offshore petroleum industry

Kjersti Steinsvåga, Magne Bråtveita, Bente Moena, Li V-Torill Austgulenb, Bjørg Eli Hollundc, Inger Margrethe Haalandd, Jakob Nærheimb, Kristin Svendsene and Hans Kromhoutf

  1. aDepartment of Public Health and Primary Health Care, Section for Occupational Medicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
  2. bStatoil ASA, Stavanger, Norway
  3. cX-lab, Bergen, Norway
  4. dNorsk Hydro ASA, Oil and Energy Operations, Bergen, Norway
  5. eDepartment of Industrial Economics and Technology Management, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
  6. fInstitute for Risk Assessment Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands

Correspondence: , Department of Public Health and Primary Health Care, Section for Occupational Medicine, University of Bergen, Kalfarveien 31, N-5018 Bergen, Norway. Tel. +47 55 58 61 57; Fax: +47 55 58 61 05; E-mail: kjersti.steinsvag@isf.uib.no

Received 6 December 2006; Accepted 5 March 2007; Published online 25 April 2007.

Top

Abstract

This study presents and evaluates an expert group's assessment of exposure to carcinogens for defined job categories in Norway's offshore petroleum industry, 1970–2005, to provide exposure information for a planned cohort study on cancer. Three university and five industry experts in occupational hygiene individually assessed the likelihood of exposure to 1836 combinations of carcinogens (n=17), job categories (n=27) and time periods (n=4). In subsequent plenary discussions, the experts agreed on exposed combinations. Agreement between the individual and the panel assessments was calculated by Cohen's kappa index. Using the panel assessment as reference, sensitivity and specificity were estimated. The eight experts assessed 63% of the 1836 combinations in plenary, resulting in 265 (14%) convened exposed combinations. Chlorinated hydrocarbons, benzene and inhalation of mineral oils had the highest number of exposed job categories (n=14, 9 and 10, respectively). The job categories classified as exposed to the highest numbers of carcinogens were the mechanics (n=10), derrick workers (n=6) and process technicians (n=5). The agreement between the experts' individual assessments and the panel assessment was kappa=0.53–0.74. The sensitivity was 0.55–0.86 and specificity 0.91–0.97. For these parameters, there were no apparent differences between the university experts and the industry experts. The resulting 265 of 1836 possible exposure combinations convened as "exposed" by expert assessment is presented in this study. The experts' individual ratings highly agreed with the succeeding panel assessment. Correlation was found between years of experience of the raters and agreement with the panel. The university experts and the industry experts' assessments had no apparent differences. Further validation of the exposure assessment is suggested, such as by new sampling data or observational studies.

Keywords:

retrospective exposure assessment, Cohen's kappa index, sensitivity, specificity

MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS

These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated.

NEWS AND VIEWS

Oil geology in China

Nature News and Views (22 May 1980)

RESEARCH

Reliability of a semi-quantitative method for dermal exposure assessment (DREAM)

Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology Research Article

Reliability of a semi-quantitative method for dermal exposure assessment (DREAM)

Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology Research Article

See all 3 matches for Research

Extra navigation

.

natureproducts


ADVERTISEMENT