The man-made mineral fiber European historical cohort study: Extension of the follow-up

The study concentrated on 21 967 workers producing rock wool/slag wool, glass wool or continuous filament in 13 European factories. The expected deaths and incident cancer cases were derived from multiplying the accumulated person-years by national reference rates across sex, age, and calendar-year...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health environment & health, 1986-01, Vol.12, p.34-47
Hauptverfasser: Simonato, Lorenzo, Fletcher, Antony C, Cherrie, John, Andersen, Aage, Bertazzi, Pier A, Charnay, Nadette, Claude, Jenny, Dodgson, Jim, Estève, Jacques, Frentzel-Beyme, Rainer, Gardner, Martin J, Jensen, Ole M, Olsen, Jørgen H, Saracci, Rodolfo, Teppo, Lyly, Winkelmann, Regina, Westerholm, Peter, Winter, Paul D, Zocchetti, Carlo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The study concentrated on 21 967 workers producing rock wool/slag wool, glass wool or continuous filament in 13 European factories. The expected deaths and incident cancer cases were derived from multiplying the accumulated person-years by national reference rates across sex, age, and calendar-year strata, correction factors for regional lung cancer mortality also being used. Exposure assessment was based on the results of a historical environmental investigation reported elsewhere. There were 189 deaths (151.2 expected), and for rock-wool/slag-wool and glass-wool workers the standardized mortality ratios for lung cancer showed a pattern of increasing mortality with time since first exposure but not duration of employment. There was an excess of lung cancer among rock-wool/slag-wool workers employed during an early technological phase before the introduction of dust-suppressing agents, and fiber exposure, either alone on in combination with other exposures, may have contributed to the elevated risk. No excess of the same magnitude was evident for glass-wool production, and the follow-up of the continuous filament cohort was too short to allow for an evaluation of possible long-term effects. There was no evidence of an increased risk for pleural tumors or nonmalignant respiratory diseases.
ISSN:0355-3140
1795-990X