Chlorinated Drinking Water and Bladder Cancer: Effect of Misclassification on Risk Estimates

Abstract
Data are presented from the Iowa portion of the National Bladder Cancer Case-Control Study demonstrating the effect of misclassification on depressing odds ratio estimates for years of exposure to chlorinated drinking water and bladder cancer. Four methods (METHODS 1 through 4) of quantifying chlorination exposure with sequentially decreasing degrees of misclassification are presented for the 268 bladder cancer cases and 658 population-based controls fulfilling criteria for inclusion in this study. Twenty-eight other risk factors for bladder cancer were considered along with chlorinated drinking water exposure estimated by METHOD 4. Stepwise regression models included as significant factors cigarette smoking (p < .001), chlorination exposure (p = .038), and irradiation to the pelvic area (p = .040). Replacement of chlorinated drinking water exposure estimated by METHOD 4 with any of the remaining three methods resulted in models that included cigarette smoking and irradition to the pelvic area, but not chlorination exposure. Thus, misclassification of chlorination exposure signified the difference between observing and not observing an association with bladder cancer.