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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Beginning in 1988, a question added to the Washington State death certificate asked whether the decedent had smoked during the last 15 years of life. We analyzed death certificate data to evaluate the effectiveness of this question in identifying groups with high smoking rates and occupations with high rates of
respiratory disease
death among nonsmokers. We obtained statistical death certificate data from the Washington State Department of Health for resident deaths occurring between 1988 and 1991. Analyses included information on age, sex, race/ethnicity, marital status, underlying cause of death, high school graduation, smoking during the last 15 years of life, and occupation. Based on logistic regression analysis, we found that male sex, youth, divorced status, or death from
lung cancer
, chronic obstructive lung disease, or ischemic heart disease predicted a higher risk of smoking during the last 15 years of life. Hispanic ethnicity, single or widowed status, high school graduation, or death from breast cancer, diabetes, motor vehicle accidents, other accidents, or homicide predicted a lower risk of smoking. In farming occupations, there was an excess number of chronic obstructive lung disease deaths among nonsmokers. Findings from this study suggest that patterns of smoking during the last 15 years of life among decedents can provide useful public health surveillance information. The collection of risk factor information, such as smoking, should be recommended for the U.S. standard death certificate. Questions on smoking should be both simple and answerable by informants who may not have known the decedent for a lifetime. Additional studies on the accuracy of smoking history from the death certificate should be conducted.
...
PMID:History of smoking from the Washington State death certificate. 788 May 52
Some 3500 new cases of occupational
respiratory disease
are estimated to have been seen annually by SWORD participants in 1992 and 1993 with little important difference between the two years. As the number of new cases recognized and reported by chest physicians is close to complete, the estimated incidence is essentially correct. The pattern of disease which clearly emerges shows that at least half is attributable to asbestos exposure, despite the fact that
lung cancer
from this cause may be under-reported. Benign pleural disease comprises a large proportion of the cases, the long-term implications of which are unknown. Almost 40% of the cases reported are of occupational asthma or inhalation accidents, both due to a very large number of different agents and affecting many and varied occupations. These cases are preventable providing their occupational aetiology is recognized and appropriate measures of control are intensified.
...
PMID:SWORD '93. Surveillance of work-related and occupational respiratory disease in the UK. 794 59
Inhalatory intake of environmental agents may have adverse effects on health, the lung being the first target. Therefore, an increased risk of
lung cancer
and
respiratory disease
is in general considered as an indication of environmental health problems related to exposure to industrial emissions, traffic exhaust and smog. Classical epidemiological studies of the association between exposure to ambient air pollutants and respiratory dysfunctions and studies with laboratory animals have failed to demonstrate the distinct proof of risk for the general population that would be needed to form a basis for high impact environmental policy measures. Here, as an example, we describe the uncertainty in assessing risks of
lung cancer
associated with environmental exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. The recently introduced methodology of molecular cancer epidemiology is considered to yield more information on the relationship between exposure to environmental carcinogens and tumour development. Recent advances in the study of carcinogen (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon) dosimetry at the DNA level in combination with proto-oncogenic activation in humans are described.
...
PMID:Human respiratory disease: environmental carcinogens and lung cancer risk. 822 89
A cohort of some 11,000 men born 1891-1920 and employed for at least one month in the chrysotile mines and mills of Quebec, was established in 1966 and has been followed ever since. Of the 5351 men surviving into 1976, only 16 could not be traced; 2508 were still alive in 1989, and 2827 had died; by the end of 1992 a further 698 were known to have died, giving an overall mortality of almost 80%. This paper presents the results of analysis of mortality for the period 1976 to 1988 inclusive, obtained by the subject-years method, with Quebec mortality for reference. In many respects the standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) 20 years or more after first employment were similar to those for the period 1951-75--namely, all causes 1.07 (1951-75, 1.09); heart disease 1.02 (1.04); cerebrovascular disease 1.06 (1.07); external causes 1.17 (1.17). The SMR for
lung cancer
, however, rose from 1.25 to 1.39 and deaths from mesothelioma increased from eight (10 before review) to 25; deaths from respiratory tuberculosis fell from 57 to five. Among men whose exposure by age 55 was at least 300 million particles per cubic foot x years (mpcf.y), the SMR (all causes) was elevated in the two main mining regions, Asbestos and Thetford Mines, and for the small factory in Asbestos; so were the SMRs for
lung cancer
, ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and
respiratory disease
other than pneumoconiosis. Except for
lung cancer
, however, there was little convincing evidence of gradients over four classes of exposure, divided at 30, 100, and 300 mpcf.y. Over seven narrower categories of exposure up to 300 mpcf.y the SMR for
lung cancer
fluctuated around 1.27 with no indication of trend, but increased steeply above that level. Mortality form pneumoconiosis was strongly related to exposure, and the trend for mesothelioma was not dissimilar. Mortality generally was related systematically to cigarette smoking habit, recorded in life from 99% of survivors into 1976; smokers of 20 or more cigarettes a day had the highest SMRs not only for
lung cancer
but also for all causes, cancer of the stomach, pancreas, and larynx, and ischaemic heart disease. For
lung cancer
SMRs increased fivefold with smoking, but the increase with dust exposure was comparatively slight for non-smokers, lower again for ex-smokers, and negligible for smokers of at least 20 cigarettes a day; thus the asbestos-smoking interaction was less than multiplicative. Of the 33 deaths from mesothelioma in the cohort to date, 28 were in miners and millers and five were in employees of a small asbestos products factory where commercial amphiboles had also been used. Preliminary analysis also suggest that the risk of mesothelioma was higher in the mines and mills at Thetford Mines than in those at Asbestos. More detailed studies of these differences and of exposure-response relations for
lung cancer
are under way.
...
PMID:The 1891-1920 birth cohort of Quebec chrysotile miners and millers: mortality 1976-88. 828 Jun 38
Passive smokers are exposed to a quantitatively smaller but qualitatively different smoke than active smokers. Clinical and epidemiological investigations indicate that allergic and nonallergic subjects are susceptible to tobacco smoke. The most frequent symptoms are eye irritation and blinking, nasal and throat irritation, nausea and headache. Acute effects on respiratory system are manifested by increase of airway resistance and decrease of airway specific conductance. Chronic effects include deterioration of pulmonary function, exacerbation of allergy, chronic pulmonary diseases, angina pectoris and increase of relative risk of
lung cancer
. Children are sensitive to tobacco smoke even before birth and exposure during the first year of life increases the risk of
respiratory disease
. Passive smoking at workplace is recognized as a cause of occupational respiratory diseases and the tollerable concentration of cigarette smoke is suggested for 8-hour exposure of healthy workers.
...
PMID:[Passive smoking--(un)recognized effects on the respiratory system]. 830 42
A retrospective cohort mortality study was conducted among 7814 white shoe manufacturing workers followed from 1940 through 1982. The workers were potentially exposed to solvents (including toluene) and solvent-based adhesives. Benzene may have been present as an impurity of toluene. Mortality due to leukemia and aleukemia was not statistically significantly elevated. Statistically significant excess mortality due to cancer of the trachea, bronchus and lung was observed in the total cohort [standardized mortality ratio (SMR) 147, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 120-180] and showed a statistically significant trend in standardized relative risk with increasing potential latency, but not with increasing duration of employment. Chronic nonmalignant
respiratory disease
was significantly elevated among the men (SMR 158, 95% CI 114-217) but was less than expected among the women (SMR 79), a finding suggesting a possible contribution of smoking to the mortality from respiratory cancer. However, adjustment for the potential effects of smoking did not completely eliminate the increased risk for
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:Mortality of workers employed in shoe manufacturing. 831 84
Lung cancer
is the number one cause of cancer-related death for women in the United States, yet studies describing the experience of women living with
lung cancer
are nonexistent. A sample of 69 women with
lung cancer
described their symptom distress using the Symptom Distress Scale (SDS). The majority of the women (86%) had been diagnosed with primary or recurrent
lung cancer
within the 2 years previous, 78% had non-small-cell
lung cancer
, and 43% were currently receiving treatment. The most prevalent and most distressing symptoms included fatigue, frequent pain, and insomnia. Poor outlook, dyspnea, and appetite disruptions were other common distressing problems. Sixty-one percent of the subjects had two or more serious symptoms. Forty-one percent of those subjects with fatigue concurrently experienced frequent pain, and 31% had insomnia. Those with recurrent disease had significantly greater levels of distress (P = 0.03). Concurrent
respiratory disease
, previous chemotherapy, recurrent
lung cancer
, no surgical treatment, and low income were associated with a high level of symptom distress (P < 0.05). Treatment was not a significant factor relating to distress. Distress was strongly correlated to quality of life (r = 0.72, P < 0.001) and functional status (r = 0.71, P < 0.001). Poverty-level income was a weak predictor of distress among demographic and disease/treatment variables, accounting for 17% of the variance. Combined with recurrence, the model accounted for 26% of the variance.
...
PMID:Correlates of symptom distress in women with lung cancer. 832 26
A cohort mortality study was conducted among workers from two plants in the diatomaceous earth mining and processing industry in California. Diatomaceous earth consists of the skeletal remains of diatoms. Exposure to amorphous (non-crystalline) and crystalline silica in the form of quartz results from open pit mining and exposure to crystalline silica (principally cristobalite) occurs in the processing of the material.
Lung cancer
and non-malignant respiratory diseases have been the health outcomes of greatest concern. The main study cohort included 2570 white men (533 Hispanic and 2017 non-Hispanic workers) who were employed for at least 12 months cumulative service in the industry and who had worked for at least one day during the follow up period, 1942-87. Vital status was ascertained for 91% of the cohort and death certificate information was retrieved for 591 of 628 (94%) identified deaths. The all causes combined standardised mortality ratio (SMR) was slightly increased (SMR = 1.12; 628 observed) compared with rates among US white males. The principal contributors to this excess were increased risks from
lung cancer
(SMR = 1.43; 59 observed) and non-malignant
respiratory disease
(NMRD) excluding infectious diseases and pneumonia (SMR = 2.59; 56 observed). The excess of
lung cancer
persisted when local county rates were used for comparison (SMR = 1.59). Internal rate comparisons by Poisson regression analysis were conducted to assess potential dose-response relations for
lung cancer
and NMRDs. Mortality trends were examined in relation to duration of employment in dust exposed jobs and with respect to an index of cumulative exposure to crystalline silica. The crystalline silica index was a semiquantitative measure that combined information on duration of exposure, differences in exposure intensity between jobs and calendar periods, the crystalline content of the various product mixes, and the use of respiratory protection devices. Increasing gradients of risk were detected for
lung cancer
and NMRD with both exposure indices. The relative risk trends for
lung cancer
and NMRD with crystalline silica exposure lagged 15 years were respectively: 1.00, 1.19, 1.37, and 2.74, and 1.00, 1.13, 1.58, and 2.71. Based on a review of available but limited data on cigarette smoking in the cohort and from application of indirect methods for assessing confounding variables, it seems unlikely that smoking habits could account for all of the association between exposure to dust and
lung cancer
. The intense and poorly controlled dust exposures encountered before the 1950s were probably the most aetiologically significant contributors to risks from
lung cancer
and NMRDs. The absence of an excess of
lung cancer
among workers hired since 1960, and the finding of no deaths attributed to pneumoconiosis as an underlying cause of death among workers hired since 1950 indicate that exposure reductions in the industry during the past 40 years have been successful in reducing excess risks to workers. Further mortality follow up of the cohort and the analysis of radiographic data will be needed to determine conclusively the long term patterns of disease risks in this industry.
...
PMID:Mortality among workers in the diatomaceous earth industry. 834 19
A case-control study of malignant and non-malignant
respiratory disease
among employees of the Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation's Newark, Ohio plant was undertaken. The aim was to determine the extent to which exposures to substances in the Newark plant environment, to non-workplace factors, or to a combination may play a part in the risk of mortality from
respiratory disease
among workers in this plant. A historical environmental reconstruction of the plant was undertaken to characterise the exposure profile for workers in this plant from its beginnings in 1934 to the end of 1987. The exposure profile provided estimates of cumulative exposure to respirable fibres, fine fibres, asbestos, talc, formaldehyde, silica, and asphalt fumes. Employment histories from Owens-Corning Fiberglas provided information on employment characteristics (duration of employment, year of hire, age at first hire) and an interview survey obtained information on demographic characteristics (birthdate, race, education, marital state, parent's ethnic background, and place of birth), lifetime residence, occupational and smoking histories, hobbies, and personal and family medical history. Matched, unadjusted odds ratios (ORs) were used to assess the association between
lung cancer
or non-malignant
respiratory disease
and the cumulative exposure history, demographic characteristics, and employment variables. Only the smoking variables and employment characteristics (year of hire and age at first hire) were statistically significant for
lung cancer
. For non-malignant
respiratory disease
, only the smoking variables were statistically significant in the univariate analysis. Of the variables entered into a conditional logistic regression model for
lung cancer
, only smoking (smoked for six months or more v never smoked: OR = 26.17, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 3.316-206.5) and age at first hire (35 and over v less than 35: OR = 0.244, 95% CI 0.083-0.717) were statistically significant. There were, however, increased ORs for year of employment (first hired before 1945 v first hire after 1945: OR = 1.944, 95% CI 0.850-4.445), talc (cumulative exposure >1000 fibres/ml days v never exposed: OR = 1.355, 95% CI 0.407-5.515), and asphalt fumes (cumulative exposure >0.01 mg/m(3) days v never exposed: OR 1.131, 95% CI 0.468-2.730). For non-malignant
respiratory disease
, only the smoking variable was significant in the conditional logistic regression analysis (OR = 2.637, 95% CI 1.146-6.069). There were raised ORs for the higher cumulative exposure categories for respirable fibres, asbestos, silica, and asphalt fumes. For both silica and asphalt fumes, ORs were more than double the reference groups for all exposure categories. A limited number of subjects were exposed to fine fibres. The scarcity of cases and controls limits the extent to which analyses for fine fibre may be carried out. Within those limitations, among those who had worked with fine fibre, the unadjusted, unmatched OR for
lung cancer
was (1.0 (95% CI 0.229-4.373) and for non-malignant
respiratory disease
, the OR was 1.5 (95% CI 0.336-6.702). The unadjusted OR for
lung cancer
for exposure to fine fibre was consistent with that for all respirable fibre and does not suggest an association. For non-malignant
respiratory disease
, the unadjusted OR for fine fibre was opposite in direction from that for all respirable fibres. Within the limitations of the available data on fibre, there is o suggestion that exposure to fine fibre has resulted in an increase in risk of
lung cancer
. The increased OR for non-malignant
respiratory disease
is inconclusive. The results of this population, in this place and time, neither respirable fibres nor any of the substances investigated as part of the plant environment are statistically significant factors for
lung cancer
risk although there are increased ORs for exposure to talc and asphalt fumes. Smoking is the most important factors in risk for
lung cancer
in this population. The situation is less clear for non-malignant
respiratory disease
. Unlike
lung cancer
, non-malignant respiratory represents a constellation of outcomes and not a single well defined end point. Although smoking was the only statistically significant factor for non-malignant
respiratory disease
in this analysis, the ORs for respirable fibres, asbestos, silica, and asphalt fumes were greater than unity for the highest exposure categories. Although the raised ORs for these substances may represent the results of a random process, they may be suggestive of an increased risk and require further investigation.
...
PMID:A case-control study of malignant and non-malignant respiratory disease among employees of a fiberglass manufacturing facility. II. Exposure assessment. 839 58
A retrospective study of 1011 hospitalized patients with pneumonia was undertaken to assess the value of routine convalescent chest radiography for detection of underlying
lung cancer
. To investigate the mode of clinical onset of pulmonary carcinoma, 232 inpatients with this diagnosis were also studied. The findings may be summarized as follows: 1) 13/1011 pneumonia patients were found to have previously undiagnosed pulmonary carcinoma; 2) many of these carcinomas (8/13) were disclosed by an acute chest X-ray; 3) pulmonary carcinoma was found by convalescent chest X-ray in 2/88 patients not feeling well and in 2/524 patients feeling well at follow-up, and none of these 4 patients benefitted from the carcinoma diagnosis; 4) ESR was of no value in detecting underlying pulmonary carcinoma at follow-up in patients with pneumonia; 5) of the 232 patients with pulmonary carcinoma, 29 (12.5%) presented with an acute respiratory tract infection; 6) most of these latter patients did not recover as expected and their correct diagnosis was made based on a chest X-ray performed because of persistent symptoms. We suggest that patients with radiologically verified pneumonia undergo clinical examination or are interviewed 4-5 weeks after the onset. If signs or symptoms of
respiratory disease
persist, chest X-ray should be performed. We consider, however, that routine convalescent chest radiography with the aim of detecting any underlying pulmonary tumour could be omitted if the patient has completely recovered 1 month after the acute onset of illness.
...
PMID:Association of pneumonia and lung cancer: the value of convalescent chest radiography and follow-up. 846 Mar 56
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