Increased risk of malignant mesothelioma of the pleura after residential or domestic exposure to asbestos: a case-control study in Casale Monferrato, Italy.

The association of malignant mesothelioma (MM) and nonoccupational asbestos exposure is currently debated. Our study investigates environmental and domestic asbestos exposure in the city where the largest Italian asbestos cement (AC) factory was located. This population-based case-control study included pleural MM (histologically diagnosed) incidents in the area in 1987-1993, matched by age and sex to two controls (four if younger than 60). Diagnoses were confirmed by a panel of five pathologists. We interviewed 102 cases and 273 controls in 1993-1995, out of 116 and 330 eligible subjects. Information was checked and completed on the basis of factory and Town Office files. We adjusted analyses for occupational exposure in the AC industry. In the town there were no other relevant industrial sources of asbestos exposure. Twenty-three cases and 20 controls lived with an AC worker [odds ratio (OR) = 4.5; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.8-11.1)]. The risk was higher for the offspring of AC workers (OR = 7.4; 95% CI, 1.9-28.1). Subjects attending grammar school in Casale also showed an increased risk (OR = 3.3; 95% CI, 1.4-7.7). Living in Casale was associated with a very high risk (after selecting out AC workers: OR = 20.6; 95% CI, 6.2-68.6), with spatial trend with increasing distance from the AC factory. The present work confirms the association of environmental asbestos exposure and pleural MM, controlling for other sources of asbestos exposure, and suggests that environmental exposure caused a greater risk than domestic exposure.

[1]  L. Mowad,et al.  Mesothelioma in Connecticut, 1955-1977. Occupational and geographic associations. , 1983, Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association.

[2]  M. Gardner,et al.  Effects on health of non-occupational exposure to airborne mineral fibres. , 1989, IARC scientific publications.

[3]  E. C. Hammond,et al.  MORTALITY EXPERIENCE OF RESIDENTS IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF AN ASBESTOS FACTORY , 1979, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[4]  J. Benichou,et al.  Malignant mesothelioma: attributable risk of asbestos exposure. , 1994, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[5]  M. Falchi,et al.  Asbestos lung burden and asbestosis after occupational and environmental exposure in an asbestos cement manufacturing area: a necropsy study. , 1998, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[6]  B Terracini,et al.  Malignant mesothelioma of the pleura: interobserver variability. , 1995, Journal of clinical pathology.

[7]  J. Holland,et al.  Malignant mesothelioma in young adults , 1990, Cancer.

[8]  G. Cecchetti,et al.  Airborne mineral fibre concentrations in an urban area near an asbestos-cement plant. , 1989, IARC scientific publications.

[9]  C. Magnani,et al.  [Tumor mortality and from other causes in asbestos cement workers at the Casale Montferrato plant]]. , 1996, La Medicina del lavoro.

[10]  M Nesti,et al.  Unusually High Incidence of Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma in a Town of Eastern Sicily: An Epidemiological and Environmental Study , 2000, Archives of environmental health.

[11]  C. Ivaldi,et al.  Mesothelioma and non-occupational environmental exposure to asbestos , 1991, The Lancet.

[12]  Ramon Silva Martins,et al.  Malignant pleural mesothelioma. , 2012, Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network : JNCCN.

[13]  D. Howel,et al.  Routes of asbestos exposure and the development of mesothelioma in an English region. , 1997, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[14]  J. Wagner,et al.  Diffuse Pleural Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure in the North Western Cape Province , 1960, British journal of industrial medicine.

[15]  G. Chiappino,et al.  L'inquinamento atmosferico da amianto nell'ambiente urbano : Milano, Casale Monferrato, Brescia, Ancona, Bologna, Firenze , 1991 .

[16]  G. Hillerdal Mesothelioma: cases associated with non-occupational and low dose exposures. , 1999, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[17]  B. Everitt,et al.  Statistical methods for rates and proportions , 1973 .

[18]  S. Constantopoulos,et al.  Malignant pleural mesothelioma from nonoccupational asbestos exposure in Metsovo (north-west Greece): slow end of an epidemic? , 1996, The European respiratory journal.

[19]  J. Siemiatycki,et al.  Nonoccupational exposure to chrysotile asbestos and the risk of lung cancer. , 1998, The New England journal of medicine.

[20]  M. Goldberg,et al.  Environmental exposure to tremolite and respiratory cancer in New Caledonia: a case-control study. , 2000, American journal of epidemiology.

[21]  A. D. McDonald,et al.  Malignant mesothelioma in North America , 1980, Cancer.

[22]  L. Simonato,et al.  Epidemiological and environmental evidence of the health effects of exposure to erionite fibres: A four‐year study in the cappadocian region of turkey , 1987, International journal of cancer.

[23]  P. Betta,et al.  Malignant mesothelioma of the pleura. The reproducibility of the immunohistological diagnosis. , 1997, Pathology, research and practice.

[24]  M. Hobbs,et al.  Enviromental exposure to crocidolite and mesothelioma: Exposure-response relationships , 1995 .

[25]  B Terracini,et al.  Multicentric study on malignant pleural mesothelioma and non-occupational exposure to asbestos , 2000, British Journal of Cancer.

[26]  Janie Roberson,et al.  Interobserver variability , 2002, Cancer.

[27]  A. D. McDonald,et al.  The epidemiology of mesothelioma in historical context. , 1996, The European respiratory journal.

[28]  M. Roth A quantitative assessment , 1987 .

[29]  B Terracini,et al.  Pleural malignant mesothelioma and non-occupational exposure to asbestos in Casale Monferrato, Italy. , 1995, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[30]  M L Newhouse,et al.  Mesothelioma of pleura and peritoneum following exposure to asbestos in the London area , 1965, British journal of industrial medicine.

[31]  N. Breslow,et al.  Statistical methods in cancer research: volume 1- The analysis of case-control studies , 1980 .

[32]  B Terracini,et al.  A cohort study on mortality among wives of workers in the asbestos cement industry in Casale Monferrato, Italy. , 1993, British journal of industrial medicine.

[33]  N. Vianna,et al.  NON-OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE TO ASBESTOS AND MALIGNANT MESOTHELIOMA IN FEMALES , 1978, The Lancet.

[34]  J. Birkbeck Meat and cancer , 1991, The Lancet.

[35]  M. Hobbs,et al.  Environmental exposure to crocidolite and mesothelioma: exposure-response relationships. , 1996, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[36]  H. Pass,et al.  Simian virus 40-like DNA sequences in human pleural mesothelioma. , 1994, Oncogene.