Background To investigate exposureยฑresponse relationships for silica, silicosis, and lung cancer. Methods Quantitative review of the literature identiยฎed in a computerized literature search. ## Results The risk of silicosis (ILO category 1/1 or more) following a lifetime of exposure at the curren
Is silicosis required for silica-associated lung cancer?
โ Scribed by Harvey Checkoway; Alfred Franzblau
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 111 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0271-3586
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Background:
Abundant epidemiologic and experimental evidence supports the 1997 international agency for research on cancer classification of crystalline silica as a human lung carcinogen. nonetheless, there remains uncertainty about whether excessive lung cancer occurs exclusively among workers with silicosis.
Methods:
A review was performed of published occupational epidemiologic literature directly pertinent to the interrelations among silica exposure, silicosis, and lung cancer.
Results:
The association between silica and lung cancer is generally, but not uniformly, stronger among silicotics than nonsilicotics. however, the existing literature is ambiguous due to incomplete or biased ascertainment of silicosis, inadequate exposure assessment, and the inherently strong correlation between silica exposure and silicosis which hinders efforts to disentangle unique contributions to lung cancer risk.
Conclusions:
Until more conclusive epidemiologic findings become available, population-based or individually-based risk assessments should treat silicosis and lung cancer as distinct entities whose cause/effect relations are not necessarily linked.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
A case-referent study has been carried out regarding a possible connection between silica exposure and lung cancer (ICD 162) in Central Italy, where the pottery industry has a long tradition. Silicosis among 72 cases of lung cancer and among 314 referents, all deceased, was ascertained through check
## Abstract ## Background Xuanwei, China, experiences some of the highest rates of lung cancer in China. While lung cancer risk has been linked to the household use of bituminous coal, no study has comprehensively evaluated the risk of lung cancer associated with the mining of this coal in Xuanwei