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Query: UMLS:C0037116 (
silicosis
)
1,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We previously reported on the lung cancer mortality through 1983 of 760 males who were diagnosed with
silicosis
during 1930-1983 by the State of North Carolina's medical examination program for dusty trades workers. The lung cancer
SMR
(95% confidence interval) was 2.6 (1.8-3.6) among 655 white members of this group. In this paper, we report the results of a reanalysis of mortality among a subgroup for whom chest radiographs were currently available for rereading. Technically acceptable radiographs were available for 306 white males and were independently reclassified for pneumoconiosis by 3 "B" readers using the 1980 ILO Classification. Lung cancer SMRs were 1.7 (0.8-3.1) for the entire group of 306 white males, 2.5 (1.1-4.9) for 143 subjects reclassified as simple
silicosis
, and 1.0 (0.1-3.5) for 96 subjects whose radiographs were reclassified as ILO category 0. There were no lung cancer deaths among 67 subjects whose radiographs were reclassified as progressive massive fibrosis. Corresponding lung cancer SMRs for subjects who had never been employed in a job with exposure to known occupational carcinogens were 1.2 (0.2-4.4) for those reclassified as category 0, and 2.4 (1.0-5.0) for those reclassified as having simple
silicosis
. The age-adjusted lung cancer rate ratio among subjects with simple
silicosis
compared to those with category 0 was 1.5 (0.4-5.8). Our findings from this reanalysis, which effectively controls for misclassification of
silicosis
due to errors in radiograph interpretation by North Carolina program readers, offer additional evidence consistent with the hypothesis of an association between
silicosis
and lung cancer in this study group.
...
PMID:Reevaluation of silicosis and lung cancer in North Carolina dusty trades workers. 141 83
The mortality of a cohort of 1487 male patients with
silicosis
in a population-based register followed up from 1980 to 1986 was evaluated with reference to the mortality rates of the general male population. A striking excess of deaths from all causes (observed 368, standardized mortality ratio,
SMR
3.00) was noted. Seventy-four percent of the deaths were due to respiratory conditions and complications directly or indirectly related to
silicosis
. The risk of death was especially higher than expected in younger patients under 45 years of age. Patients with simple
silicosis
of profusion category 1 did not appear to be at any increased risk of death relative to the general population, but increasing excesses of death were associated with greater extent of simple and conglomerate disease. These increased mortality risks were observed in tuberculosis-free patients as well as in those who never smoked. For the same extent of silicotic disease, the risk of death was higher if tuberculosis occurred. There was no evidence, however, that patients who smoked were more likely to suffer a worse mortality outcome than those who did not. Age at diagnosis, extent of silicotic disease and the occurrence of tuberculosis were therefore strong predictors of mortality in patients with
silicosis
.
...
PMID:Predictors of mortality in silicosis. 161 76
The association between
silicosis
and lung cancer mortality was estimated in 9,912 (369 silicotics and 9,543 nonsilicotics) white male metal miners. These miners were examined by the U.S. Public Health Service during 1959-1961 and were followed through 1975. Miners were excluded from this study if they were employed in a mine during 1959-1961 that used diesel equipment underground. The ores that were mined consisted of copper, lead-zinc, iron, mercury, lead silver, gold and gold-silver, tungsten, and molybenum. The standardized mortality ratio (
SMR
, U.S. white male rates) for lung cancer was 1.73 (95% CI: .94-2.90) in silicotics and 1.18 (95% CI: .98-1.42) in nonsilicotics. Additionally, SMRs were higher in silicotics than in nonsilicotics, even in most subgroups stratified by cigarette smoking habit, type of ore mined, years of service in an underground job, radon exposure group, or year of hire. When lung cancer mortality between silicotics and nonsilicotics was compared, the age-adjusted rate ratio (95% CI) was 1.56 (.91-2.68), and the age- and smoking-adjusted rate ratio was 1.96 (.98-3.67). Corresponding figures for miners who were employed in mines with low levels of radon exposure were 1.90 (.98-3.67) and 2.59 (1.44-4.68), respectively. These findings indicate that lung cancer mortality risk was increased in silicotics, and this probably did not result from chance or bias. However, confounding from radon exposure could not be ruled out. The findings indicate that further follow-up of this cohort is needed.
...
PMID:Silicosis and lung cancer in U.S. metal miners. 200 98
Lung cancer mortality from 1980 to 1986 was studied in a cohort of 1,419 men in a
silicosis
register who had no previous exposure to asbestos and polyaromatic hydrocarbons. The 28 deaths from lung cancer were statistically in excess of expected (
SMR
2.03; 95% CI 1.35-2.93). Excess risks of lung cancer were found in both underground workers (
SMR
3.41; 95% CI 1.10-7.97; based on 5 deaths) and surface workers (
SMR
1.87, 95% CI 1.18-2.81; based on 23 deaths). All lung cancer deaths were smokers. There was an increase in SMRs with longer latency periods and years of exposure, with the greatest risk found in those who had worked for 30 or more years after more than 30 years since first exposed (
SMR
3.07, based on 16 deaths). The risk for lung cancer was higher in those with tuberculosis (
SMR
2.52; 95% CI 1.52-3.94) and showed an increasing trend with severity of
silicosis
, from category 1 to 3 and from category A to C, with highest risk in those with tuberculosis and category 3 (
SMR
4.44 based on 3 deaths) or tuberculosis and category C (
SMR
7.63 based on 7 deaths). Most of the excess lung cancer risk in silicotics is due to smoking, but a synergistic effect between smoking and silica/
silicosis
on the risk of lung cancer is also likely. In particular, a possible role of
silicosis
and tuberculosis as the fibrotic seedbed for malignant growth in the lung is strongly supported.
...
PMID:Mortality of a cohort of men in a silicosis register: further evidence of an association with lung cancer. 230 8
The mortality risk of iron ore (haematite) miners between 1970 and 1982 was investigated in a retrospective cohort study of workers from two mines, Longyan and Taochong, in China. The cohort was limited to men and consisted of 5406 underground miners and 1038 unexposed surface workers. Among the 490 underground miners who died, 205 (42%) died of
silicosis
and silicotuberculosis and 98 (20%) of cancer, including 29 cases (5.9%) of lung cancer. The study found an excess risk of non-malignant respiratory disease and of lung cancer among haematite miners. The standardised mortality ratio for lung cancer compared with nationwide male population rates was significantly raised (
SMR
= 3.7), especially for those miners who were first employed underground before mechanical ventilation and wet drilling were introduced (
SMR
= 4.8); with jobs involving heavy exposure to dust, radon, and radon daughters (
SMR
= 4.2); with a history of
silicosis
(
SMR
= 5.3); and with silicotuberculosis (
SMR
= 6.6). No excess risk of lung cancer was observed in unexposed workers (
SMR
= 1.2). Among current smokers, the risk of lung cancer increased with the level of exposure to dust. The mortality from all cancer, stomach, liver, and oesophageal cancer was not raised among underground miners. An excess risk of lung cancer among underground mine workers which could not be attributed solely to tobacco use was associated with working conditions underground, especially with exposure to dust and radon gas and with the presence of non-malignant respiratory disease. Because of an overlap of exposures to dust and radon daughters, the independent effects of these factors could not be evaluated.
...
PMID:Mortality experience of haematite mine workers in China. 232 25
A mortality study was carried out on a cohort of workers who were exposed to silica dust in a refractory brick plant. The cohort was divided into two groups: workers with and without
silicosis
, and their mortality was contrasted with the death rate of Genova from 1960 to 1979. Results show an increased risk for laryngeal tumors (3 obs., 0.44 exp.,
SMR
= 682), nonmalignant respiratory disease (16 obs., 3.2 exp.,
SMR
= 500), and cardiovascular diseases (19 obs., 11 exp.,
SMR
= 173) among silicotics. The mortality rate for lung cancer showed an increase for the cohort of workers as a whole (11 obs., 6 exp.,
SMR
= 183). The almost double overall mortality observed in silicotic subjects raises some doubts about the validity of other proportional mortality studies that showed no excesses for workers in these industries.
...
PMID:A cohort study of workers employed in a refractory brick plant. 283 86
The mortality experience of 1190 miners and 289 surface industry workers receiving workers' compensation awards for
silicosis
in Ontario since 1940 has been studied up to mid-1985. Both groups were found to have a significantly increased mortality from lung cancer (miners'
SMR
: 230; surface workers'
SMR
: 302) and stomach cancer (miners'
SMR
: 188; surface workers'
SMR
: 366). Adjustment for smoking and country of origin did not explain the excesses observed. The lung cancer findings are consistent with observations from
silicosis
registries in Europe. Possible explanatory factors are discussed.
...
PMID:Mortality among workers receiving compensation awards for silicosis in Ontario 1940-85. 295 10
In a retrospective cohort mortality study of 10,403 Minnesota iron-ore (hematite) miners no excesses of lung cancer mortality were found among either underground (Standardized mortality ratio [
SMR
] = 100) or above ground (
SMR
= 88) miners. Yugoslav-born miners incurred a two-fold significant excess mortality for lung cancer that did not appear to be associated with their mining exposures. Significant excesses in mortality due to stomach cancer were found for both underground (
SMR
= 167) and aboveground (
SMR
= 181) miners as compared with U.S. white males. However, except among Finnish-born miners, these excesses disappeared when comparisons were made with the appropriate county rate. The apparent absence of significant radon exposure, a strict smoking prohibition underground, an aggressive
silicosis
control program, and the absence of underground diesel fuel use may explain why these underground miners did not appear to incur the lung cancer risk reported in other studies.
...
PMID:A retrospective cohort mortality study of iron ore (hematite) miners in Minnesota. 403 88
Cohort studies in three American asbestos factories were undertaken to investigate the effect of fibre type and manufacturing process on lung cancer, mesothelioma, and asbestosis. Reports have been published on a chrysotile textile plant in South Carolina and a mainly textile plant in Pennsylvania, which also used amphiboles. In the third plant in Connecticut friction products and packings were made from chrysotile only. In a cohort of 3641 men employed for one month or more, 1938-58, 3513 (96.5%) were traced, 1267 (36%) had died, and death certificates were obtained for 1228 (96.9%). Individual exposures were estimated (in mcpf . years) from impinger measurements. Life table analyses using Connecticut mortality rates gave an
SMR
for all causes of 108.5 (USA 107.9). The
SMR
(all causes) for men who had worked for less than a year was 129.9 and for those who had worked for a year or more, 101.2. The equivalent SMRs for respiratory cancer were 167.4 and 136.7 respectively. Excluding men who had worked for less than a year, there was possible evidence of some increase in risk of lung cancer with increasing exposure, supported also by a "log-rank" (case-control) analysis, of the same order as that observed in chrysotile mining and milling. These findings may be compared with chrysotile textile manufacture where the risk of lung cancer was some 50-fold greater. It is suggested that the differences in risk are perhaps related to the higher proportion of submicroscopic fibres in textile manufacture that may result from the traumatic carding , spinning, and weaving processes. No case of mesothelioma was found, consistent with a much lower risk of this tumour with chrysotile than with amphiboles. Twelve deaths (nine in men with very short and low asbestos exposure) were given ICD code 523 (pneumoconiosis); all but two were ascribed to anthracosilicosis or
silicosis
and none to asbestosis.
...
PMID:Dust exposure and mortality in an American chrysotile asbestos friction products plant. 632 94
Mortality study was carried out on the cohort of 11,224 men with coal workers' pneumoconiosis or
silicosis
diagnosed during the period 1970-1985. The cohort was selected from the register of occupational diseases and was traced up to the end of 1991. The general male population of Poland was a reference group. The study showed small but significant excess of total mortality (
SMR
= 115; p < 0.01). The analysis of death causes revealed an elevated mortality from infectious diseases, among which tuberculosis was most prevalent (
SMR
= 212; p < 0.01) and from pneumoconioses predominant in diseases of the respiratory system, (
SMR
= 426; p < 0.01) and lung cancer (
SMR
= 116; p < 0.01). The comparison of the prevalence of smoking in the population under study with that in the reference general male population of Poland indicated that this habit is mostly responsible for the excess of lung cancer deaths. This finding contradicts the hypothesis that there is a causal relationship between exposure to dusts containing crystalline silica, pneumoconiosis and lung cancer.
...
PMID:Mortality pattern in men with pneumoconiosis in Poland. 858 29
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