Is There an Association between Pleural Plaques and Lung Cancer Without Asbestosis?

Objectives—A recent review or meta-analysis of epidemiologie studies concluded that persons with asbestos-related pleural plaques do not have an increased risk of lung cancer in the absence of parenchymal asbestosis. The reviewer inferred that this conclusion provided indirect supportive evidence fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health Environment & Health, 1994-02, Vol.20 (1), p.62-64
Hauptverfasser: Nurminen, Markku, Tossavainen, Antti
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives—A recent review or meta-analysis of epidemiologie studies concluded that persons with asbestos-related pleural plaques do not have an increased risk of lung cancer in the absence of parenchymal asbestosis. The reviewer inferred that this conclusion provided indirect supportive evidence for the proposition that asbestosis is a necessary precursor of asbestos-related lung cancer. The objective of the present communication is to contest these claims. Methods—Finnish epidemiologie data and population statistics were used to estimate the apparent risk ratio of lung cancer associated with radiographie signs of pleural plaques. Power calculations were applied to compute the needed population sizes to demonstrate that the association is statistically significant. Results—Unrealistically large population studies would be needed to observe the statistical relation between pleural plaques and lung cancer, quantitated as a risk ratio of 1.1, resulting from relatively low levels of environmental asbestos exposure. In realistic and valid epidemiologie studies on heavily exposed subpopulations, a two-or threefold risk can be identified. Conclusions — Uninformative studies should not be interpreted as providing suppressive evidence that pleural plaques are a noncausal risk indicator of lung cancer. Even for the null hypothesis, the inference that asbestosis is a necessary causal link between asbestos and lung cancer is illogical.
ISSN:0355-3140
1795-990X
DOI:10.5271/sjweh.1427