Dioxin Exposure and Cancer Risk in the Seveso Women's Health Study

BACKGROUND: 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin (TCDD), a Widespread environmental contaminant, disrupts multiple endocrine pathways. The International Agency for Research on Cancer classified TCDD as a known human carcinogen, based on predominantly male occupational studies of increased mortalit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental health perspectives 2011-12, Vol.119 (12), p.1700-1705
Hauptverfasser: Warner, Marcella, Mocarelli, Paolo, Samuels, Steven, Needham, Larry, Brambilla, Paolo, Eskenazi, Brenda
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container_end_page 1705
container_issue 12
container_start_page 1700
container_title Environmental health perspectives
container_volume 119
creator Warner, Marcella
Mocarelli, Paolo
Samuels, Steven
Needham, Larry
Brambilla, Paolo
Eskenazi, Brenda
description BACKGROUND: 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin (TCDD), a Widespread environmental contaminant, disrupts multiple endocrine pathways. The International Agency for Research on Cancer classified TCDD as a known human carcinogen, based on predominantly male occupational studies of increased mortality from all cancers combined. OBJECTIVES: After a chemical explosion on 10 July 1976 in Seveso, Italy, residents experienced some of die highest levels of TCDD exposure in a human population. In 1996, we initiated the Seveso Women's Health Study (SWHS), a retrospective cohort study of the reproductive health of the women. We previously reported a significant increased risk for breast cancer and a nonsignificant increased risk for all cancers combined With individual serum TCDD, but the cohort averaged only 40 years of age in 1996. Herein we report results fer risk of cancer from a subsequent follow-up of the cohort in 2008. METHODS: in 1996, We enrolled 981 women who were (0—40 years of age in 1976, lived in the most contaminated areas, and had archived sera collected near the explosion. Individual TCDD concentration Was measured in archived serum by high-resolution mass spectrometry. A total of 833 women participated in the 2008 follow-up study. We examined the relation of serum TCDD with cancer incidence using Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: In total, 66 (6.7%) women had been diagnosed with cancer. The adjusted hazard ratio (HR) associated with a 10-fold increase in serum TCDD for all cancers combined was significantly increased [adjusted HR =1.80; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.29, 2.52]. For breast cancer, the HR was increased, but not significantly (adjusted HR = 1.44; 95% CI: 0.89,2.33). CONCLUSIONS: Individual serum TCDD is significantly positively related with all cancer incidence in the SWHS cohort, more than 30 years later. This all-female study adds to the epidemiologic evidence that TCDD is a multisite carcinogen.
doi_str_mv 10.1289/ehp.1103720
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The International Agency for Research on Cancer classified TCDD as a known human carcinogen, based on predominantly male occupational studies of increased mortality from all cancers combined. OBJECTIVES: After a chemical explosion on 10 July 1976 in Seveso, Italy, residents experienced some of die highest levels of TCDD exposure in a human population. In 1996, we initiated the Seveso Women's Health Study (SWHS), a retrospective cohort study of the reproductive health of the women. We previously reported a significant increased risk for breast cancer and a nonsignificant increased risk for all cancers combined With individual serum TCDD, but the cohort averaged only 40 years of age in 1996. Herein we report results fer risk of cancer from a subsequent follow-up of the cohort in 2008. METHODS: in 1996, We enrolled 981 women who were (0—40 years of age in 1976, lived in the most contaminated areas, and had archived sera collected near the explosion. Individual TCDD concentration Was measured in archived serum by high-resolution mass spectrometry. A total of 833 women participated in the 2008 follow-up study. We examined the relation of serum TCDD with cancer incidence using Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: In total, 66 (6.7%) women had been diagnosed with cancer. The adjusted hazard ratio (HR) associated with a 10-fold increase in serum TCDD for all cancers combined was significantly increased [adjusted HR =1.80; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.29, 2.52]. For breast cancer, the HR was increased, but not significantly (adjusted HR = 1.44; 95% CI: 0.89,2.33). CONCLUSIONS: Individual serum TCDD is significantly positively related with all cancer incidence in the SWHS cohort, more than 30 years later. 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The International Agency for Research on Cancer classified TCDD as a known human carcinogen, based on predominantly male occupational studies of increased mortality from all cancers combined. OBJECTIVES: After a chemical explosion on 10 July 1976 in Seveso, Italy, residents experienced some of die highest levels of TCDD exposure in a human population. In 1996, we initiated the Seveso Women's Health Study (SWHS), a retrospective cohort study of the reproductive health of the women. We previously reported a significant increased risk for breast cancer and a nonsignificant increased risk for all cancers combined With individual serum TCDD, but the cohort averaged only 40 years of age in 1996. Herein we report results fer risk of cancer from a subsequent follow-up of the cohort in 2008. METHODS: in 1996, We enrolled 981 women who were (0—40 years of age in 1976, lived in the most contaminated areas, and had archived sera collected near the explosion. 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Individual TCDD concentration Was measured in archived serum by high-resolution mass spectrometry. A total of 833 women participated in the 2008 follow-up study. We examined the relation of serum TCDD with cancer incidence using Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: In total, 66 (6.7%) women had been diagnosed with cancer. The adjusted hazard ratio (HR) associated with a 10-fold increase in serum TCDD for all cancers combined was significantly increased [adjusted HR =1.80; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.29, 2.52]. For breast cancer, the HR was increased, but not significantly (adjusted HR = 1.44; 95% CI: 0.89,2.33). CONCLUSIONS: Individual serum TCDD is significantly positively related with all cancer incidence in the SWHS cohort, more than 30 years later. This all-female study adds to the epidemiologic evidence that TCDD is a multisite carcinogen.</abstract><cop>Research Triangle Park, NC</cop><pub>National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences</pub><pmid>21810551</pmid><doi>10.1289/ehp.1103720</doi><tpages>6</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Breast cancer
Cancer
Cancer incidence
Carcinogenesis, carcinogens and anticarcinogens
Chemical agents
Chemical hazards
Cohort Studies
Dioxin
Dioxins
Environment. Living conditions
Environmental Exposure
Environmental health
Female
Health aspects
Humans
Incidence
Italy - epidemiology
Mass Spectrometry
Medical sciences
Menopause
Mortality
Neoplasms - epidemiology
Neoplasms - etiology
Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins - blood
Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins - toxicity
Proportional Hazards Models
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Retrospective Studies
Risk factors
Toxicology
Tumors
Women
Womens health
title Dioxin Exposure and Cancer Risk in the Seveso Women's Health Study
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