Lung cancer mortality among nonsmoking uranium miners exposed to radon daughters.

Radon daughters, both in the workplace and in the household, are a continuing cause for concern because of the well-documented association between exposure to radon daughters and lung cancer. To estimate the risk of lung cancer mortality among nonsmokers exposed to varying levels of radon daughters, 516 white men who never smoked cigarettes, pipes, or cigars were selected from the US Public Health Service cohort of Colorado Plateau uranium miners and followed up from 1950 through 1984. Age-specific mortality rates for nonsmokers from a study of US veterans were used for comparison. Fourteen deaths from lung cancer were observed among the nonsmoking miners, while 1.1 deaths were expected, yielding a standardized mortality ratio of 12.7 with 95% confidence limits of 8.0 and 20.1. These results confirm that exposure to radon daughters in the absence of cigarette smoking is a potent carcinogen that should be strictly controlled.

[1]  F. Abdellah Health, United States, 1989 , 1990 .

[2]  H Checkoway,et al.  Bias due to misclassification in the estimation of relative risk. , 1977, American journal of epidemiology.

[3]  C. Robinson,et al.  A modified life-table analysis system for cohort studies. , 1983, Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association.

[4]  C. Key,et al.  Uranium mining and lung cancer in Navajo men. , 1984, The New England journal of medicine.

[5]  J. Horáček,et al.  Cancer in man after exposure to Rn daughters. , 1988, Health physics.

[6]  R. Hornung,et al.  Quantitative risk assessment of lung cancer in U.S. uranium miners. , 1987, Health physics.

[7]  L. Garfinkel Time trends in lung cancer mortality among nonsmokers and a note on passive smoking. , 1981, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[8]  O. Axelson Aspects on confounding in occupational health epidemiology. , 1978, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[9]  Kahn Ha The Dorn Study of Smoking and Mortality Among U.S. Veterans: Report on Eight and One-Half Years of Observation , 1966 .

[10]  E. Radford,et al.  Lung cancer in Swedish iron miners exposed to low doses of radon daughters. , 1984, The New England journal of medicine.

[11]  E. C. Hammond,et al.  Smoking and cancer in the United States. , 1980, Preventive medicine.

[12]  N E Breslow,et al.  Power considerations in epidemiologic studies of vinyl chloride workers. , 1981, American journal of epidemiology.

[13]  V. E. Archer,et al.  RESPIRATORY DISEASE MORTALITY AMONG URANIUM MINERS , 1976, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[14]  K. Rothman,et al.  Epidemiologic Analysis with a Programmable Calculator , 1982 .