With the use of the Swedish Cancer-Environment Registry, census data on employment in 1960 were linked with registry data on bladder cancer during 1961-79. This hypothesis-generating study revealed ...for the first time associations between bladder cancer and employment in pulp and fiberboard manufacturing, in rope and twine making, and work as a dental technician. Statistically significant increases in risk were also found for several occupations previously associated with bladder cancer, including barbers and beauticians, artistic painters, toolmakers and machinists, and physicians, and employment in butcher shops, industrial chemical making, apparel manufacturing, and plumbing. Etiologic inferences cannot be made from this investigation, but the findings from this large national resource provide further clues to the occupational determinants of bladder cancer.
Because implants can provoke varied immune system responses, we assessed whether hip and knee implant recipients had an increased risk of autoimmune/connective tissue diseases (AI/CTDs). Using ...national registry data from Sweden, we compared hospitalization rates for AI/CTD in 101,771 hip and 23,891 knee implant recipients to rates in the general population. Hip patients were followed up to 22 years and knee patients up to 14 years postimplantation. Our findings indicate that it is unlikely that hip or knee implantation results in any increased risk for most AI/CTDs. After long-term followup, the associations we observed with polyarteritis nodosa and fibrositis could be the basis for future investigations.
An expanded cohort study of 74,828 benzene-exposed and 35,805 unexposed workers were followed during 1972 to 1987, based on a previous study in 12 cities in China. A small increase was observed in ...total cancer mortality among benzene-exposed compared with unexposed workers (relative risk RR = 1.2). Statistically significant excesses were noted for leukemia (RR = 2.3), malignant lymphoma (RR = 4.5), and lung cancer (RR = 1.4). When risks were evaluated by leukemia subtype, only acute myelogenous leukemia was significantly elevated (RR = 3.1), although nonsignificant excesses were also noted for chronic myelogenous leukemia (RR = 2.6) and acute lymphocytic leukemia (RR = 2.3). A significant excess was also found for aplastic anemia.
Investigation of cancer rates—including trends over time, geographic variations, and differences by race, gender, and age—may identify patterns suggesting environmental exposures of potential ...occupational origin. National mortality data spanning the 40-year period from 1950 to 1989 were used to assess the patterns of several cancers for which occupational components have been identified among men, including cancers of the lung and bladder, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and leukemia, and for cancers of particular concern to women, such as breast and ovarian cancer, but for which occupational factors have not been well characterized. Newly available preliminary data show substantial geographic variation in cancer mortality rates at the county level during the 1970s and 1980s. Future analyses of the patterns, correlations with industrial indicators, and analytic studies should be fruitful in identifying occupational and other risk factors for cancers among women.
A case-control study involving interviews with 1,244 patients (758 males and 486 females) with cancer of the esophagus or gastric cardia and 1,314 population-based controls (789 males, 525 females) ...was carried out in Linxian, a rural county in North Central China with one of the world's highest mortality rates for these tumors. Cancer risks tended to rise with increasing intake of wheat and corn, but no association was found with adult intake of pickled vegetables, the leading a priori suspect, and risks were not elevated among those consuming low quantities of fresh vegetables or fruits. Few differences in preparation or storage of food or water were detected, although cancer patients reported less fluid intake than controls. Few persons reported drinking alcoholic beverages. Smoking was reported by 61% of the male cases and was a mild risk factor, related more to cancer of the cardia than of the esophagus. The risk was increased by 70% among those whose parents had esophageal or stomach cancer, but only slightly among those whose spouses had such cancers, suggesting that exposure early in life and/or genetic effects may be involved.
Serum samples were collected in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, from 1970 to 1972 for 208 persons who in 1973-1983 developed stomach cancer; for 77 who in 1973-1983 developed lung cancer; and for ...controls matched for age, sex, city, and season of blood collection. Average serum levels of selenium and zinc were slightly (< 5%) but not significantly lower among the cancer cases than among controls. Smoking-adjusted risks of lung cancer were elevated only among those in the lowest quartiles of serum selenium odds ratio (OR) = 1.8 and zinc (OR = 1.3); the trends in risk of this cancer with decreasing serum levels were neither linear nor significant. Little or no excess risk of stomach cancer was observed among those with lowest levels of selenium (OR = 1.0) or zinc (OR = 1.2). These exploratory findings add to limited data available from other reports showing slightly increased risks of lung cancer associated with low blood levels of selenium, but suggest little association with either lung or stomach cancer across normal selenium or zinc ranges in this Japanese population.
To examine the risk of neurologic disorders among women with breast implants.
Case reports in the literature have raised concern about a possible link between silicone breast implants and some types ...of neurologic disorders, but there is a dearth of epidemiologic studies in this area.
Through the nationwide Swedish hospital discharge register, we identified a population-based cohort of 7433 women with breast implants. A similarly identified cohort of 3351 women who underwent breast reduction surgery served as a comparison. The women were followed from 1972 (or date of breast surgery if it occurred later) through 1993 by means of record linkages and review of inpatient medical records. Ratios of observed to expected numbers, and relative risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI), were calculated as measures of the risk of neurologic diseases among women with implants.
A direct comparison of the exposed (implant) versus comparison (breast reduction) groups, after exclusion of patients with pre-existing disease or incorrect neurologic diagnoses, showed no excess risk among implant patients (RR = 0.8; 95% CI = 0.5 to 1.4). When external rates derived from the background population were used as comparison, we found a small, statistically nonsignificant excess of neurologic disorders both in the breast implant (RR = 1.3; 95% CI = 0.9 to 1.9) and the breast reduction (RR = 1.5; 95% CI = 0.9 to 2.4) cohorts.
Our results provide no support for the conjecture that breast implants cause neurologic disease.
In an attempt to assess whether silica induces lung cancer, a nested case-control study of 316 male lung cancer cases and 1352 controls was carried out among pottery workers and tungsten, ...copper-iron, and tin miners from five provinces in south central China. Exposure to dust and silica for each study subject was evaluated quantitatively by cumulative exposure measures based on historical industrial hygiene records. Measurements on confounders such as inorganic arsenic, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and radon were also collected from the worksites. Information on cigarette smoking was obtained by interviews of the subjects or their next of kin. A significant trend of increasing risk of lung cancer with exposure to silica was found for tin miners, but not for miners working in tungsten or copper-iron mines. Concomitant and highly correlated exposures to arsenic and PAHs among tin miners were also found. Risk of lung cancer among pottery workers was related to exposure to silica, although the dose-response gradient was not significant. Risks of lung cancer were significantly increased among silicotic subjects in iron-copper and tin mines, but not in pottery factories or tungsten mines. The results of this study provide only limited support for an aetiological association between silica and lung cancer.
Intuitively, breast tissue mass should be directly related to a woman's risk of breast cancer, simply because having more cells at risk would seem to increase the potential for malignant ...transformation. However, studies attempting to link breast size with breast cancer risk have been inconsistent. Limitations include crude measures of breast size, the inability to distinguish glandular from adipose tissue, and the confounding influence of co-factors such as obesity. A nationwide study in Denmark was undertaken to investigate the effect of breast reduction surgery on the subsequent risk of breast cancer, including an evaluation of the patterns of risk by age and time since surgery. The Danish Hospital Discharge Registry was used to identify women who underwent reduction mammaplasty between 1977 and 1992. Linkage based on personal identification numbers with the Danish Cancer Registry provided information on cancer incidence. Expected numbers of cancers were calculated from rates in the general population. Among 7,720 women whose breasts were surgically reduced, 182 cancers were subsequently observed cf 209 expected (standardized incidence ratio SIR = 0.9; 95 percent confidence interval CI = 0.7-1.0). Breast cancer was significantly reduced by nearly 50 percent (29 observed cf 53.9 expected, SIR = 0.5, CI = 0.4-0.8), and accounted for the overall deficit in cancer. The risk reductions were related inversely to age at surgery, with significant deficits apparent only among women 40 years of age and older at surgery and especially among those over age 50 (SIR = 0.3). No clear trend was apparent with increasing years post-surgery. The findings indicate that breast reduction surgery among women over age 40 is associated with a lower subsequent risk of breast cancer, but the surgery and presumably glandular mass appear less closely related to breast cancer risk among younger women.
Risch and Miller argue that it is by no means clear that female smokers have the same smoking dose-related risks of lung cancer as males. The evidence to date indicates that female smokers are more ...sensitive than male smokers to the effects of smoking in inducing lung cancer.