Paper
17 May 2001 Modeling of uncertainty associated with dose-response curves as applied for probabilistic risk assessment in laser safety
Karl Schulmeister, Gerald Sonneck, Herbert Hoedlmoser, Frank Rattay, John Mellerio, David H. Sliney
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Abstract
In laser safety, dose-response curves describe the probability for ocular injury as a function of ocular energy, and are often used to quantify the risk for ocular injury given a certain level of exposure to laser radiation. In principal, a dose-response curve describes the biological variation of the individual thresholds in a population. In laser safety, a log-normal cumulative distribution is generally assumed for the dose-response curve, for instance when Probit analysis is performed. The lognormal distribution is defined by two parameters, the median, called ED50, and the slope. When animal experiments are performed to obtain dose-response curves for laser induced injury, experimental uncertainty such as focussing errors as well as variability within the group of experimental animals, such as inter-individual variability of absorption of the ocular media, can influence the shape of the dose-response curve. We present simulations of uncertainties and variabilities that show that the log-normal dose-response curve as obtained in a animal experiments can grossly overestimate the probability for ocular damage for small doses. It is argued that the intrinsic slope for an individual’s dose-response curve is rather steep, even for retinal injury, however, the dose-response curve for a group or population can be broader when there is inter-individual variability of parameters which influence the threshold. The quantitative results of the simulation of the grouping of individual dose-response curves can serve as basis to correct potentially biased dose-response curves as well as to characterize the uncertainty associated with the ED50 and the slope of the dose-response curve. A probabilistic risk analysis model, which accounts for these uncertainties by using Monte-Carlo simulation, was developed for retinal laser injuries from pulsed lasers with wavelengths from 200 nm to 20 µm, and the interpretation of the results are discussed on the basis of example calculations.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Karl Schulmeister, Gerald Sonneck, Herbert Hoedlmoser, Frank Rattay, John Mellerio, and David H. Sliney "Modeling of uncertainty associated with dose-response curves as applied for probabilistic risk assessment in laser safety", Proc. SPIE 4246, Laser and Noncoherent Light Ocular Effects: Epidemiology, Prevention, and Treatment, (17 May 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.426713
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Injuries

Absorption

Eye models

Laser damage threshold

Statistical analysis

Laser safety

Monte Carlo methods

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