RSI's Franco Momoli

Dr. Franco Momoli

PhD, MSc

Vice-President Chemical and Product Safety

Joined RSI in 2019

  • Experienced epidemiologist and biostatistician

  • Adjunct Professor at the University of Ottawa, School of Epidemiology and Public Health

  • Broad experience in clinical research and environmental chemical human health risk assessment

  • Expert in evidence synthesis and quantitative bias modelling of epidemiologic studies

  • Served as a member and interim chair of the CHEO Research Ethics Board

Dr. Franco Momoli joined Risk Sciences International (RSI) in 2019 and currently serves as Vice-President, Chemical and Product Safety. In this role, he leads a multidisciplinary team of epidemiologists, risk assessors, toxicologists, and biostatisticians in conducting human health risk assessments related to environmental contaminants and consumer products. His practice group supports government agencies, regulatory bodies, and international partners in making science-informed decisions that safeguard public health.

As RSI’s lead on chemical and product safety, Dr. Momoli has guided major projects including:

  • Systematic review and robust evidence integration of epidemiologic and toxicologic data—including human, animal, and mechanistic studies—for Health Canada on the health effects of fluoride, arsenic, and asbestos, covering drinking water and inhalation exposure routes;
  • Safety assessment of residual barium impurities in a novel clinical therapeutic product, including derivation of a permissible daily exposure;
  • Development of a Bayesian Network weight-of-evidence tool for Health Canada to support hazard identification in environmental chemical risk assessments;
  • Benchmark dose modelling to derive points of departure as a first step in developing regulatory health-based values for arsenic and fluoride;
  • Mode-of-action framework analysis of mechanistic data on formaldehyde and upper respiratory tumors;
  • Numerous projects and publications for the International Manganese Institute on biomarkers of manganese exposure, including updated diagnostic recommendations for manganism;
  • Collaboration with the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) on a problem formulation framework for risk assessment guidelines, and development of the APRIO structured question framework for designing research and risk assessment questions;
  • Support to Health Canada on a modernized, public health–driven approach to chemicals management;
  • Consulting for the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, focusing on modernizing provincial and territorial cancer registries, including artificial intelligence applications;
  • Toxicokinetic modelling of lead at Canadian contaminated sites using the US EPA All-Ages Lead Model, Version 3; and
  • Consultations on methodologies for deriving points of departure for formaldehyde and particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10).

At RSI, Dr. Momoli is recognized for integrating modern methodologies with real-world applicability. His dedication to methodological rigor, statistical clarity, and policy relevance has shaped RSI’s approach to chemical risk assessment and consumer product safety. In addition to his leadership at RSI, he holds an appointment as Adjunct Professor (previously Associate Professor) in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa, bridging academic theory with regulatory application.

Pre-RSI

Dr. Momoli’s career began not in epidemiology, but in the animal sciences, where his fascination with human aging was sparked by Caleb Finch’s Longevity, Senescence, and the Genome. This early interest led him to graduate work on Alzheimer’s disease, conducting behavioural and cognitive testing on transgenic and knockout mouse models as part of his M.Sc. research at McGill University and the Douglas Hospital Research Institute.

He later transitioned into epidemiology and biostatistics, where he earned a Ph.D. at McGill University. Over the years, Dr. Momoli developed specialized expertise in semi-Bayesian models, quantitative bias modeling, and the application of advanced statistical methods to population health.

As a professor at the University of Ottawa, Dr. Momoli taught and mentored numerous graduate students, many of whom now hold influential roles in academia, public health, and research institutions. He was one of Canada’s principal scientists in the MOBI-Kids international study on non-ionizing radiation from cell phones and brain tumors in youth.

Prior to joining RSI, he spent a decade at the research institutes of The Ottawa Hospital and the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO), where he collaborated on a broad range of studies in adult and pediatric health. These included diagnostic accuracy studies, randomized controlled trials of medical and device interventions, scoping and systematic reviews of new therapeutic products, survey design, and secondary data analyses of hospital records, spanning many topics in clinical research. During this time, he also served on research ethics boards at both institutions, including as interim chair of the CHEO Research Ethics Board, and was a member of CHEO’s Policy Ethics Board—roles that deepened his perspective on ethical dimensions in clinical and epidemiological research.

As an educator and methods specialist, he often attempted to popularize modern design and analytical methods to improve the quality of evidence; he frequently joined journal clubs with trainees or physicians to discuss recently published research from a methodologic perspective, including clubs for radiologists, orthopedic surgeons, dermatologists, vascular surgeons, pediatric medical residents, and intensive care physicians.

During his time with the research institutes, Dr. Momoli was a longstanding member of the CHEO SPARK Group (Sleep-disordered Breathing in Populations of At-Risk Kids), Ottawa Brain Tumor Group, Ottawa Hospital Upper Extremity Orthopaedics Research Group, Ottawa Hospital Delirium in Palliative Settings Research Group, Ottawa Hospital Urology Research Group, Ottawa Hospital Stroke Research Group, and Ottawa Hospital Vascular Surgery Research Group. He was a member of various research teams, including Evaluation to Action (Aboriginal Child Health), 5P (Predicting Persistent Post-Concussive Problems in Paediatrics), SUNDIPS (Studies to Understand Delirium in Palliative Care Settings), MOBI-Kids Consortium (Brain Tumor Etiology in Youth), and the DDEPICT/DDACA (Determination of Death) Investigators Group.

He is an author of several book chapters on environmental health and toxicology, including Patty’s Industrial Hygiene and Toxicology, the Encyclopedia of Environmental Health, and the International Encyclopedia of Public Health. He has published over 100 articles across the breadth of epidemiologic clinical research, as well as epidemiologic and toxicologic human health risk assessments of chemicals.

Dr. Momoli, who believes teaching is a vocation, giving one of his many and regular lectures.

Case studies associated with Franco Momoli

Drinking Water Guidelines for Manganese

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

Establishing science-based drinking water guidelines for manganese requires integrating diverse regulatory approaches, emerging modeling tools, and evolving toxicological evidence. The client commissioned this project to systematically assess existing manganese drinking water guidelines and the scientific foundations upon which they are...
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EFSA Framework for Problem Formulation

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

To enhance the methodological rigour of its scientific assessments, EFSA sought to develop a standardised framework for problem formulation (PF) within its non-application scientific assessment protocols. The goal was to support the planning phase of these assessments by establishing a...
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Environmental Public Health Approach (EPHA) to Chemicals Expert Workshop

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

To advance the Government of Canada’s Chemicals Management Plan (CMP), a virtual expert workshop was planned and hosted to refine and evaluate a Canadian framework for the Environmental Public Health Approach (EPHA) to chemicals. The initiative focused on developing case...
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Communication material on lithium in drinking water and health risks

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

To support public communication around emerging drinking water concerns, RSI was engaged to develop accessible, scientifically grounded materials on lithium exposure and its potential health effects. The work focused on equipping stakeholders with clear, credible information that could inform both...
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Applying New Assessment Methods (NAMs) for Assessing Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds (SVOCs) in Indoor Residential Environments

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

Health Canada sought expert support in advancing its efforts to develop screening values for semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs) commonly found in residential indoor environments. Previous work on indoor air contaminants had focused on volatile organic compounds (VOCs), where screening values...
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External Peer Review of the Draft Screening Assessment Report on Selected C3-C5 Alcohols

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

To support the quality and defensibility of regulatory decision-making under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA), Health Canada engaged Risk Sciences International to coordinate an independent external peer review of the Draft Screening Assessment Report (DSAR) for Selected C3-C5...
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External Peer Consultation of the Inorganic – Late Biomonitoring Approach Draft Screening Assessment Report

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

To support the Chemicals Management Plan under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA), Health Canada sought expert peer consultation for a draft screening assessment report (DSAR) evaluating 47 inorganic substances identified as priorities. The client required independent scientific and technical...
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Age-Related Cognitive Decline: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

The College of Physicians & Surgeons of Alberta (CPSA) commissioned a systematic review and meta-analysis to support evidence-informed decision-making around age-related cognitive decline among practicing physicians. The initiative was led by CPSA’s Physician Health Monitoring Program (PHMP), which sought to...
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Environmental Health Factors, Chronic Diseases, and Pandemic Resilience

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

To support more effective health policy and pandemic preparedness, this project examined how environmental health factors intersect with chronic disease and influence pandemic resilience. The client sought evidence to clarify how exposures to contaminants in air, water, and soil contribute...
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Publications associated with Franco Momoli

Paediatric reference intervals and curves for haemoglobin and ferritin: protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis.


ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Reference intervals and reference curves provide clinicians with a point of reference when evaluating patients' laboratory test results. In practical applications, the 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles of healthy reference population are typically used as lower and upper reference limits....
Publication details about Paediatric reference intervals and curves for haemoglobin and ferritin: protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Understanding the experiences of lung volume recruitment among boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: A multicenter qualitative study.


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite recommendations for regular lung volume recruitment (LVR) use in clinical practice guidelines for children with neuromuscular disease, adherence to LVR is poor. We aimed to describe the experience of LVR by boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), their...
Publication details about Understanding the experiences of lung volume recruitment among boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: A multicenter qualitative study.

Locus-of-care disparities in end-of-life care intensity among adolescents and young adults with cancer: A population-based study using the IMPACT cohort.


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with cancer may experience elevated rates of high-intensity end-of-life (HI-EOL) care. Locus-of-care (LOC) disparities (pediatric vs adult) in AYA end-of-life (EOL) care are unstudied. METHODS: A decedent population-based cohort of Ontario AYAs diagnosed between...
Publication details about Locus-of-care disparities in end-of-life care intensity among adolescents and young adults with cancer: A population-based study using the IMPACT cohort.

Systemic quinolones and risk of retinal detachment III: a nested case-control study using a US electronic health records database.


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Quinolones are popular antibiotics that are known for their potency, broad coverage, and reasonable safety. Concerns have been raised about a possible association between quinolones and retinal detachment (RD). METHODS: We conducted a nested case-control study using electronic health...
Publication details about Systemic quinolones and risk of retinal detachment III: a nested case-control study using a US electronic health records database.

Probable Delirium and Associated Patient Characteristics in Long-Term Care and Complex Continuing Care: A Population-Based Observational Study.


ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To estimate the prevalence of probable delirium in long-term care (LTC) and complex continuing care (CCC) settings and to describe the resident characteristics associated with probable delirium. DESIGN: Population-based cross-sectional study using routinely collected administrative health data. SETTING AND...
Publication details about Probable Delirium and Associated Patient Characteristics in Long-Term Care and Complex Continuing Care: A Population-Based Observational Study.

Risk factors for respiratory adverse events after adenoidectomy and tonsillectomy in children with down syndrome: a retrospective cohort study.


ABSTRACT

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome is a major cause of morbidity in the Down syndrome population and is commonly treated with adenoidectomy and/or tonsillectomy (AT). However, these children are at increased risk for perioperative respiratory adverse events (PRAEs). The objective of...
Publication details about Risk factors for respiratory adverse events after adenoidectomy and tonsillectomy in children with down syndrome: a retrospective cohort study.

Pulmonary Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Ex-Preterm Children with and without Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia.


ABSTRACT

Rationale: Children born prematurely, particularly those with bronchopulmonary dysplasia, have persisting lung abnormalities requiring longitudinal monitoring. Pulmonary ultrashort echo time magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurements may provide sensitive markers of persisting lung abnormalities and have not been evaluated in school-aged...
Publication details about Pulmonary Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Ex-Preterm Children with and without Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia.

Systemic quinolones and risk of retinal detachment I: analysis of data from the US FDA adverse event reporting system.


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Quinolones comprise a class of antibiotics that are globally preferred for treating a wide range of bacterial infections due to their potency, broad coverage, favorable pharmacologic profile, and mostly mild to moderate adverse reactions. Spontaneous reports on adverse drug...
Publication details about Systemic quinolones and risk of retinal detachment I: analysis of data from the US FDA adverse event reporting system.

Routine lung volume recruitment in boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: a randomised clinical trial.


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Impaired cough results in airway secretion retention, atelectasis and pneumonia in individuals with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Lung volume recruitment (LVR) stacks breaths to inflate the lungs to greater volumes than spontaneous effort. LVR is recommended in DMD clinical...
Publication details about Routine lung volume recruitment in boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: a randomised clinical trial.

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RSI News associated with Franco Momoli

Aging and cognitive decline

Working with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta, Risk Sciences International conducted a wide-ranging review of aging and cognitive decline, with specific focus on aging physicians and fitness to practice.  The publication in Aging & Mental Health documents domains of cognition that decline with older age, concerns with...
News article about Aging and cognitive decline

Quinolones and risk of retinal detachment

Following previous work on the potential risk of acute liver failure associated with quinolone antibiotics, RSI investigators, Mohamed Taher, Franco Momoli, Donald Mattison and Daniel Krewski evaluated the potential risk of retinal detachment (RD) associated with these medications. Although no cases of RD were linked to quinolones in clinical trials, some...
News article about Quinolones and risk of retinal detachment

Bias Assessment in Case-Control and Cohort Studies for Hazard Identification

IARC recently published a volume on quantitative bias modelling: Bias assessment in case–control and cohort studies for hazard identification (IARC Scientific Publication No. 171). We are pleased to see inclusion of some of the work RSI's Drs Franco Momoli and Daniel Krewski conducted for the INTERPHONE and MOBI-Kids studies of...
News article about Bias Assessment in Case-Control and Cohort Studies for Hazard Identification

Outside RSI

Outside the office, Franco Momoli blends intellectual curiosity with physical balance and creative pursuits. A firm believer that teaching is a vocation, he remains engaged in academia not just as an adjunct professor but as a public educator, frequently lecturing on statistical modeling, risk interpretation, and the interplay between science and policy.

Franco’s love of classic literature informs his way of thinking—structured, reflective, and precise. He also finds peace on the water, often kayaking the Ottawa River or exploring local waterways. Whether alone in a kayak or in a dragon boat crew, Franco sees rhythm and balance as essential—not unlike the principles that guide his epidemiologic modeling.

He is also a devoted student and practitioner of Aikido, a martial art that emphasizes the redirection of energy, intentionality, and mutual respect—values that mirror his approach to leadership and mentorship. And when not kayaking, lecturing, or solving statistical puzzles, Franco is likely savoring good coffee, something he treats as both ritual and reward.

Whether at work or at rest, Dr. Momoli embodies the ethos of deliberate inquiry, methodical progress, and quiet excellence—a rare blend of scientific rigor and humanistic sensibility.

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