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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Stainless steel welding is associated with exposure to metals including hexavalent chromium and nickel. This study is a meta-analysis of five studies of stainless steel welders and the occurrence of
lung cancer
.
Asbestos
exposure and smoking habits have been taken into account. The calculated pooled relative risk estimate was 1.94 with a 95% confidence interval of 1.28-2.93. This result suggests a causal relation between exposure to stainless steel welding and
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:Exposure to stainless steel welding fumes and lung cancer: a meta-analysis. 779 47
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
Pilot studies are an essential component for major chemoprevention trials. Prior to initiating the multicenter Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial to assess the effectiveness of beta-carotene and retinol for preventing
lung cancer
, we conducted pilot studies in Seattle between 1985 and 1988 in two high risk populations: current and former heavy smokers and asbestos-exposed workers. The
Asbestos
Workers Pilot Study for the Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial demonstrated that recruitment of asbestos-exposed participants with relevant risk factors was feasible from identified sources. We documented negligible toxicity and high adherence with the protocol, schedule, and intervention. Results from the pilot led to extension of the placebo run-in period, changes in the eligibility criteria, improvements in recruitment strategies and scheduling, elimination of stratification by risk factors in randomization, modifications of study vitamin dosage and of side effects monitoring, and refinement of trial design parameters for Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial. The Smokers Pilot is reported in the accompanying article (G. E. Goodman et al., Cancer Epidemiol., Biomarkers & Prev., 2: 389-396, 1993).
...
PMID:The Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial (CARET) to prevent lung cancer in high-risk populations: pilot study with asbestos-exposed workers. 834 62
Cancer is a worldwide public health problem, accounting for an increasing proportion of all deaths. It is the second leading cause of death in most of the industrialised world, and developing countries appear to be launched on a cancer epidemic, similar to that in industrialised countries. In developing countries, most cancer deaths are due to tumours of the stomach, oesophagus, lung, liver and uterine cervix; occupational cancers account for an undetermined number of these cases. Occupationally associated neoplasms may either be related directly to specific exposures within a workplace, e.g., bladder cancer in benzidine-exposed workers, or reflect indirect factors, including socioeconomic status and conditions of life.
Asbestos
-induced pneumoconiosis is recognised as an occupational disease in many developing countries, whereas asbestos-related malignancies draw less attention. The rising prevalence of cigarette smoking in these countries greatly magnifies the effect of asbestos in inducing
lung cancer
. Transplantation of industries from developed to developing countries is often accompanied by a reduction in the standard of working conditions. The rising unemployment in developing countries is unlikely to incite workers to claim better conditions.
...
PMID:Occupational cancer in developing and newly industrialized countries. 836 28
Exposure to certain industrial agents has been thought to have carcinogenic potential, both for employees who work closely with such agents and for the general population that comes in contact with them. Although case reports, laboratory studies, and epidemiologic analyses help to determine the carcinogenicity of implicated agents, each of these types of investigation has limitations and deficiencies in distinguishing causal from noncausal associations.
Asbestos
has been linked with bronchogenic carcinoma, but several controversial factors--the degree of risk relative to exposure dose, the synergistic effect of cocarcinogens, and the question of existence of a threshold dose--complicate the understanding of the magnitude of the risk for exposed persons. Several other physical and chemical agents (such as chromium, nickel, and radon) have also been associated with an increased incidence of
lung cancer
in epidemiologic and animal studies. As with asbestos, the specific type of the agent and exposure conditions are important in determining the degree of carcinogenicity. In studies of exposure to man-made mineral fibers, formaldehyde, and silica, the findings have been inconsistent. Because the degree of health hazard attributable to asbestos and other known and suspected lung carcinogens is controversial, a wide range of opinions exists about the importance of occupational exposures to the overall incidence of lung cancers. Nevertheless, attempting to prevent lung cancers by minimizing or eliminating exposure to carcinogens is preferable to treating existent cases.
...
PMID:Occupational lung cancer. 842 99
Asbestos
exposure in Sweden rapidly grew in the '50s and '60s, and then began to drop at the beginning of the '70s. The number of pleural mesotheliomas due to this exposure increased to some 80 a year during the second half of the '80s, and is rapidly increasing. The jobs with the highest risk are the wood and pulp industry, plumbing, shipbuilding, and, most of all, railroad manufacturing and sugar refineries. Data dealing with peritoneal mesotheliomas are more uncertain, and possibly misleading. As far as
lung cancer
incidence is concerned, it remains high in plumbers and insulators, while it declined to the expected levels in the other categories of exposed workers.
...
PMID:Recent data on cancer due to asbestos in Sweden. 868 93
This paper reports on the inorganic particles in the lungs of four workers who died from
lung cancer
and one who died from mesothelioma. All five workers were involved in different operations and activities in aluminum reduction plants. Retained fibrous and nonfibrous particles were evaluated by transmission electron microscopy and energy dispersive spectroscopy after lung digestion.
Asbestos
fibers, fragments of silicates, and metal-rich nonfibrous particles of chromium-cobalt and aluminum were detected. Conclusions drawn from the evaluation of the particles retained in the lungs of only five workers must be cautious. However, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons may not be the only contaminants that could explain excess mortality from malignant lung neoplasm in aluminum smelter workers.
...
PMID:Inorganic particles in the lungs of five aluminum smelter workers with pleuro-pulmonary cancer. 890 Dec 39
Asbestos
has been widely used in the refinery and petrochemical sector. Mesothelioma has occurred among maintenance employees, and it was hypothesized that mesothelioma is a marker for exposures which might increase
lung cancer
risk. A death certificate-based case-control study of mesothelioma and
lung cancer
from 1980 to 1992 was conducted in an Ontario county with a substantial presence of these industries. Each of the 17 men who died of mesothelioma and 424 with
lung cancer
were matched with controls who died of other causes. The Job and Industry fields on the death certificates were abstracted. Employment as a maintenance worker in the refinery and petrochemical sector was associated with an increased risk of mesothelioma (odds ratio: 24.5; 90% confidence interval 3.1-102). The risk of
lung cancer
among petrochemical workers, in comparison with all other workers in the county, was 0.88. In an internal comparison of maintenance employees with other blue-collar workers in the refinery and petrochemical sector, the odds ratio for
lung cancer
was 1.73 (90% confidence interval 0.83-3.6). This finding is consistent with no difference in risk between maintenance and other employees, but it is also compatible with study power being too low to achieve statistical significance. The hypothesis of increased
lung cancer
risk could be examined more fully with nested case-control studies in existing cohorts. Meanwhile, it would be prudent to reinforce adherence to asbestos control measures in the refinery and petrochemical sector.
...
PMID:Asbestos-associated cancers in the Ontario refinery and petrochemical sector. 890 10
This paper draws together the mortality experience for a cohort of some 11000 male Quebec Chrysotile miners and millers, reported at intervals since 1971 and now again updated. Of the 10918 men in the complete cohort, 1138 were lost to view, almost all never traced after employment of only a month or two before 1935; the other 9780 men were traced into 1992. Of these, 8009 (82%) are known to have died: 657 from
lung cancer
, 38 from mesotheliona, 1205 from other malignant disease, 108 from pneumoconiosis and 561 from other non-malignant respiratory diseases (excluding tuberculosis). After early fluctuations. SMRs (all causes) against Quebec rates have been reasonably steady since about 1945. For men first employed in
Asbestos
, mine or factory, they were very much what might have been expected for a blue collar population without any hazardous exposure. SMRs in the Thetford Mines area were almost 8% higher, but in line with anecdotal evidence concerning socio-economic status. At exposures below 300 (million particles per cubic foot) x years, (mpcf.y), equivalent to roughly 1000 (fibres/ml) x years-or, say, 10 years in the 1940s at 80 (fibres/ml)-findings were as follows. There were no discernible associations of degree of exposure and SMRs, whether for all causes of death or for all the specific cancer sites examined. The average SMRs were 1.07 (all causes), and 1.16, 0.93, 1.03 and 1.21, respectively, for gastric, other abdominal, laryngeal and
lung cancer
. Men whose exposures were less then 300 mpcf.y suffered almost one-half of the 146 deaths from pneumoconiosis or mesothelioma; the elimination of these two causes would have reduced these men's SMR (all causes) from 1.07 to approximately 1.06. Thus it is concluded from the viewpoint of mortality that exposure in this industry to less than 300 mpcf.y has been essentially innocuous, although there was a small risk or pneumoconiosis or mesothelioma. Higher exposures have, however, led to excesses, increasing with degree of exposure, of mortality from all causes, and from
lung cancer
and stomach cancer, but such exposures, of at least 300 mpcf.y, are several orders of magnitude more severe than any that have been seen for many years. The effects of cigarette smoking were much more deleterious than those of dust exposure, not only for
lung cancer
(the SMR for smokers of 20+ cigarettes a day being 4.6 times higher than that for non-smokers), but also for stomach cancer (2.0 times higher), laryngeal cancer (2.9 times higher), and-most importantly-for all causes (1.6 times higher).
...
PMID:The 1891-1920 birth cohort of Quebec chrysotile miners and millers: development from 1904 and mortality to 1992. 1141 50
Cohorts of Finnish asbestos sprayers and of asbestosis and silicosis patients were followed for cancer with the aid of the Finnish Cancer Registry in the period 1967-1994. Compared with the cancer incidence of the total Finnish population, asbestos sprayers had an increased risk for total cancer (standardized incidence ratio [SIR] 6.7, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 4.2-10);
lung cancer
(SIR 17.95% CI 8.2-31); and mesothelioma (SIR 263, 95% CI 85-614). The SIR of the asbestosis patients was 3.7 (95% CI 2.8-5.0) for all sites, 10 (95% CI 6.9-14) for
lung cancer
, and 65 (95% CI 13-188) for mesothelioma. The silicosis patients also had significantly high SIR values for all sites (1.5, 95% CI 1.0-2.1) and
lung cancer
(2.7, 95% CI 1.5-4.5). The values for the SIR and the standardized mortality ratio for all sites and
lung cancer
were very similar, and therefore it seems that both are reliable indicators of the occurrence of occupational cancer. It was concluded that pneumoconioses patients and asbestos-exposed workers have a markedly elevated risk for cancer.
Asbestos
-induced occupational cancers are not only diseases of the elderly, since the relative risk is high also for middle-aged people.
...
PMID:Cancer incidence and mortality among Finnish asbestos sprayers and in asbestosis and silicosis patients. 913 Dec 23
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