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      Weight-of-evidence evaluation of short-term ozone exposure and cardiovascular effects.

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          Abstract

          There is a relatively large body of research on the potential cardiovascular (CV) effects associated with short-term ozone exposure (defined by EPA as less than 30 days in duration). We conducted a weight-of-evidence (WoE) analysis to assess whether it supports a causal relationship using a novel WoE framework adapted from the US EPA's National Ambient Air Quality Standards causality framework. Specifically, we synthesized and critically evaluated the relevant epidemiology, controlled human exposure, and experimental animal data and made a causal determination using the same categories proposed by the Institute of Medicine report Improving the Presumptive Disability Decision-making Process for Veterans ( IOM 2008). We found that the totality of the data indicates that the results for CV effects are largely null across human and experimental animal studies. The few statistically significant associations reported in epidemiology studies of CV morbidity and mortality are very small in magnitude and likely attributable to confounding, bias, or chance. In experimental animal studies, the reported statistically significant effects at high exposures are not observed at lower exposures and thus not likely relevant to current ambient ozone exposures in humans. The available data also do not support a biologically plausible mechanism for CV effects of ozone. Overall, the current WoE provides no convincing case for a causal relationship between short-term exposure to ambient ozone and adverse effects on the CV system in humans, but the limitations of the available studies preclude definitive conclusions regarding a lack of causation. Thus, we categorize the strength of evidence for a causal relationship between short-term exposure to ozone and CV effects as "below equipoise."

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Crit. Rev. Toxicol.
          Critical reviews in toxicology
          Informa UK Limited
          1547-6898
          1040-8444
          Oct 2014
          : 44
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Gradient , Cambridge, MA , USA.
          Article
          10.3109/10408444.2014.937854
          25257961
          8e5ffd97-5f2c-411f-b874-98fec93fff59
          History

          causal framework,epidemiology,mode of action,risk assessment,systematic review,weight of evidence,cardiovascular system,acute toxicity,air pollution

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