Silica, compensated silicosis, and lung cancer in Western Australian goldminers.

OBJECTIVES: Silica has recently been reclassified as carcinogenic to humans based largely on the observed increase in rates of lung cancer in subjects with silicosis. Other recent reviews have arrived at different conclusions as to whether silicosis or silica itself is carcinogenic. This study aims to examine exposure-response relations between exposure to silica and subsequent silicosis and lung cancer in a cohort of goldminers. METHODS: 2,297 goldminers from Kalgoorlie in Western Australia were examined in 1961, 1974, and 1975. Data were collected on respiratory symptoms, smoking habits, and employment history. Subjects were followed up to the end of 1993. Survival analyses for lung cancer mortality and incidence of compensated silicosis were performed with age and year matched conditional logistic regression analyses. RESULTS: 89% of the cohort were traced to the end of 1993. 84% of the men had smoked at some time and 66% were current smokers. 1386 deaths occurred during the follow up period, 138 from lung cancer, and 631 subjects were compensated for silicosis. A strong effect of smoking on mortality from lung cancer, and a smaller effect on the incidence of compensated silicosis was found. There was a strong effect of duration and intensity of exposure on the incidence of silicosis. The risk of mortality from lung cancer increased after compensation for silicosis. Of all direct measures of exposure to silica, only log cumulative exposure was significantly related to incidence of lung cancer, but this effect disappeared once the onset of silicosis was taken into account. CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of silicosis was clearly related to exposure to silica and the onset of silicosis conferred a significant increase in risk for subsequent lung cancer, but there was no evidence that exposure to silica caused lung cancer in the absence of silicosis.

[1]  G. Rudolf,et al.  Regional Aerosol Deposition in Man—A Statistical and Algebraic Model , 1994 .

[2]  K Steenland,et al.  Silicosis among gold miners: exposure--response analyses and risk assessment. , 1995, American journal of public health.

[3]  Determinants of chronic bronchitis and lung dysfunction in Western Australian gold miners. , 1988, British journal of industrial medicine.

[4]  A. Musk,et al.  Preliminary study of lung cancer mortality among Western Australian gold miners exposed to silica. , 1995, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[5]  B K Armstrong,et al.  Mortality in gold and coal miners in Western Australia with special reference to lung cancer. , 1979, British journal of industrial medicine.

[6]  L. Stayner,et al.  Assessment of silicosis risk for occupational exposure to crystalline silica. , 1995, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[7]  Hj Norussis,et al.  SPSS for Windows , 1993 .

[8]  H. Weill,et al.  Exposure to crystalline silica and risk of lung cancer: the epidemiological evidence. , 1996, Thorax.

[9]  M. Ralph,et al.  An investigation into radiation exposures in underground non-uranium mines in Western Australia , 1994 .

[10]  N. Breslow,et al.  Statistical methods in cancer research. Volume II--The design and analysis of cohort studies. , 1987, IARC scientific publications.

[11]  D. English,et al.  A review of the effects of random measurement error on relative risk estimates in epidemiological studies. , 1989, International journal of epidemiology.

[12]  G. Swaen,et al.  Mortality and lung cancer in ceramic workers in The Netherlands: preliminary results. , 1996, American journal of industrial medicine.

[13]  D. Goldsmith Silica exposure and pulmonary cancer , 1994 .

[14]  Lorberau Cd,et al.  Methods used by the United States National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health to monitor crystalline silica. , 1995 .

[15]  A. Musk,et al.  Respiratory disease in non-smoking Western Australian goldminers. , 1992, British journal of industrial medicine.

[16]  C. Holman,et al.  Risk assessment in the asbestos cement industry. , 1988, British journal of industrial medicine.

[17]  Gregory S. Hewson,et al.  Estimates of Silica Exposure among Metalliferous Miners in Western Australia (1900-1993) , 1996 .

[18]  N J Heyer,et al.  Mortality among workers in the diatomaceous earth industry. , 1993, British journal of industrial medicine.

[19]  T. Guidotti Occupational epidemiology. , 2000, Occupational medicine.

[20]  E. Hnizdo,et al.  Lung cancer in relation to exposure to silica dust, silicosis and uranium production in South African gold miners. , 1997, Thorax.

[21]  M. Hobbs,et al.  Mortality in miners and millers of crocidolite in Western Australia. , 1988, British journal of industrial medicine.

[22]  N H de Klerk,et al.  Admission to hospital for road trauma in patients with diabetes mellitus. , 1983, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[23]  M. Hobbs,et al.  Diseases in miners and millers of crocidolite from Wittenoom, Western Australia: a further follow-up to December 1986 , 1994 .

[24]  C. Lorberau,et al.  Methods used by the United States National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health to monitor crystalline silica. , 1995, Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health.

[25]  H. Bartsch,et al.  International Agency for Research on Cancer. , 1969, WHO chronicle.