Diesel exhaust exposure and bladder cancer risk
β Scribed by V. Iyer; R. E. Harris; E. L. Wynder
- Book ID
- 104646565
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 430 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0393-2990
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A total of 136 cases of men with urinary bladder cancer and 272 matched hospital controls were examined for potential exposure to diesel exhaust. A lifetime occupational history was obtained for all subjects in the study and assessment of exposure to diesel exhaust was based on the job titles of the subject and self-reported exposure. The risk was assessed by odds ratios, with adjustment for confounding variables, in particular cigarette smoking. There was no evidence of elevated risk in occupations with possible or probable exposure (the ORs adjusted for smoking were 1.1. and 0.9 respectively). Truck driving alone was also not associated with elevated risk (adjusted OR=0.5). There was a weak positive crude association with any exposure, including self-reports (Oll--1.4); however after adjustment for smoking, the estimate did not retain statistical significance (OR=l.2, 95% CI=0.8-2.0). This study provides little to support the hypothesis of an excess of bladder cancer risk from occupational exposure to diesel exhaust.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Background: Diesel exhaust is considered a probable human carcinogen by the international agency for research on cancer (iarc). the epidemiologic evidence rests on studies of lung cancer among truck drivers, bus drivers, shipyard workers, and railroad workers. the general public is exposed to di
## Abstract ## Background Studies on engine exhausts and lung cancer have given inconsistent results. ## Methods Economically active Finns were followedβup for lung cancer during 1971β95 (33,664 cases). Their Census occupations in 1970 were converted to exposures to diesel and gasoline engine ex