Proportion of lung and bladder cancers in males resulting from occupation: a systematic approach.

Studies conducted in several countries that investigated the relationship of occupation and cancer in men were reviewed and compared. Estimates of the proportion of cancers due to occupational exposure that occurred in the general population were analyzed, and sources of variation were explored. A systematic and standardized evaluation of studies on lung and bladder cancer were undertaken, and only investigations that allowed for confounding from tobacco smoking were included. The proportion of lung cancers attributable to occupation ranged between 1 and 5% (when considering only exposure to asbestos) and 40% (in a study with a high proportion of subjects exposed to ionizing radiation); for bladder cancer, estimates were between 0 and 3% in a few studies and between 16 and 24% in several investigations. No similar attempt of systematic comparison was possible for other cancers.

[1]  H A Risch,et al.  Occupational factors and the incidence of cancer of the bladder in Canada. , 1988, British journal of industrial medicine.

[2]  D H Wegman,et al.  Oat cell lung cancer in selected occupations: a case-control study. , 1978, Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association.

[3]  P. Vineis,et al.  Occupation and lung cancer in two industrialized areas of northern Italy , 1988, International journal of cancer.

[4]  D. Kriebel,et al.  A case control study of lung cancer in Florence, Italy. I. Occupational risk factors. , 1985, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[5]  E. C. Hammond,et al.  General air pollution and cancer in the United States. , 1980, Preventive medicine.

[6]  B. Henderson,et al.  Occupational differences in rates of lung cancer. , 1976, Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association.

[7]  J. W. Sullivan,et al.  Epidemiologic survey of bladder cancer in greater New Orleans. , 1982, The Journal of urology.

[8]  S. Benhamou,et al.  Occupational risk factors of lung cancer in a French case-control study. , 1988, British journal of industrial medicine.

[9]  J. Lubin,et al.  Assessment of lung cancer risk factors by histologic category. , 1984, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[10]  R. Frentzel-Beyme,et al.  Occupation and risk of cancer of the lower urinary tract among men. A case‐control study , 1988, International journal of cancer.

[11]  A. Miller,et al.  Tobacco use, occupation, coffee, various nutrients, and bladder cancer. , 1980, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[12]  S. Tola,et al.  Cancer of the urinary bladder in finland , 1980, International archives of occupational and environmental health.

[13]  E D Acheson,et al.  A job-exposure matrix for use in population based studies in England and Wales. , 1985, British journal of industrial medicine.

[14]  E. Wynder,et al.  A case-control study of diesel exhaust exposure and bladder cancer. , 1985, Environmental research.

[15]  P. Vineis,et al.  Occupation and bladder cancer in males: A case‐control study , 1985, International journal of cancer.

[16]  Nathan Mantel,et al.  An epidemiological investigation of cancer of the bladder , 1963, Cancer.

[17]  P. Vineis,et al.  Estimates of the proportion of bladder cancers attributable to occupation. , 1986, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[18]  J. Higginson Proportion of cancers due to occupation. , 1980, Preventive medicine.

[19]  P. Cole Cancer and occupation: Status and needs of epidemiologic research , 1977, Cancer.

[20]  E. Wynder,et al.  Lung cancer in nonsmokers , 1984, Cancer.

[21]  R N Hoover,et al.  Occupational risks of bladder cancer in the United States: II Nonwhite men. , 1989, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[22]  E. Wynder,et al.  Diesel exhaust exposure and lung cancer: a case--control study. , 1984, Environmental research.

[23]  E. Riboli,et al.  Proportion of lung cancers due to occupational exposure , 1984, International journal of cancer.

[24]  R. Hoover,et al.  Tumors of the urinary bladder: an analysis of the occupations of 1,030 patients in Leeds, England. , 1970, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[25]  J. Wahrendorf,et al.  The Copenhagen case-referent study on bladder cancer. Risks among drivers, painters and certain other occupations. , 1987, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[26]  P. Vineis,et al.  Estimates of the proportion of lung cancer attributable to occupational exposure. , 1988, Carcinogenesis.

[27]  J. Young,et al.  Rates, interview, and pathology study of cancer of the urinary bladder in New Orleans, Louisiana. , 1968, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[28]  D. Silverman,et al.  Occupation and cancer of the lower urinary tract in Detroit. , 1983, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[29]  Ivar Heuch,et al.  Occupational exposure and lung cancer risk , 1986, International journal of cancer.

[30]  Lung cancer, smoking, and employment in foundries. , 1989, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[31]  L. Pickle,et al.  Proportion of lung cancers in males, due to occupation, in different areas of the USA , 1988, International journal of cancer.

[32]  E. Riboli,et al.  Occupation and bladder cancer in Spain: a multi-centre case-control study. , 1989, International journal of epidemiology.

[33]  N. Pearce,et al.  Bladder cancer and occupational exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons , 1989, International journal of cancer.

[34]  D. Trichopoulos,et al.  Tobacco smoking, coffee drinking, and occupation as risk factors for bladder cancer in Greece. , 1985, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[35]  F. Berrino,et al.  Mortality from lung cancer in an acetylene and phthalic anhydride plant. A case-referent study. , 1983, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[36]  L. Damber,et al.  Underground mining, smoking, and lung cancer: a case-control study in the iron ore municipalities in northern Sweden. , 1985, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[37]  R. Hoover,et al.  Truck driving and bladder cancer mortality in rural New England. , 1985, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[38]  D. West,et al.  Occupation and bladder cancer in Utah. , 1989, American journal of industrial medicine.

[39]  D. Louria,et al.  Life time occupation, smoking, caffeine, saccharine, hair dyes and bladder carcinogenesis. , 1982, International journal of epidemiology.

[40]  M. Hinds,et al.  Application of a job-exposure matrix to a case-control study of lung cancer. , 1985, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[41]  B. Henderson,et al.  Smoking, air pollution, and the high rates of lung cancer in Shenyang, China. , 1989, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[42]  T. Byers,et al.  Occupation and lung cancer risk. An analysis by histologic subtypes , 1985, Cancer.

[43]  D. Newell,et al.  Unsuspected exposure to asbestos and bronchogenic carcinoma. , 1977, British medical journal.

[44]  J. Samet,et al.  Lung cancer and occupation in New Mexico. , 1987, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[45]  S. Langård,et al.  A case-referent study of lung cancer, occupational exposures and smoking. III. Etiologic fraction of occupational exposures. , 1986, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[46]  P. Cole,et al.  Occupation and cancer of the lower urinary tract , 1972, Cancer.

[47]  R. Hoover,et al.  Lung cancer after employment in shipyards during World War II. , 1978, The New England journal of medicine.

[48]  R. Doll,et al.  The causes of cancer: quantitative estimates of avoidable risks of cancer in the United States today. , 1981, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[49]  R. Woolson,et al.  Bladder cancer risk among auto and truck mechanics and chemically related occupations. , 1985, American journal of public health.

[50]  E. Riboli,et al.  Diet and bladder cancer in Spain: A multi‐centre case‐control study , 1991, International journal of cancer.

[51]  J. Fraumeni,et al.  Occupation and lung cancer in Shanghai: a case-control study. , 1988, British journal of industrial medicine.

[52]  R. Brownson,et al.  Occupation, smoking, and alcohol in the epidemiology of bladder cancer. , 1987, American journal of public health.

[53]  R. Brownson,et al.  Study of lung cancer histologic types, occupation, and smoking in Missouri. , 1989, American journal of industrial medicine.

[54]  L. Damber,et al.  Occupation and male lung cancer: a case-control study in northern Sweden. , 1987, British journal of industrial medicine.

[55]  O S Miettinen,et al.  Proportion of disease caused or prevented by a given exposure, trait or intervention. , 1974, American journal of epidemiology.

[56]  J. Siemiatycki,et al.  Obtaining occupational exposure histories in epidemiologic case-control studies. , 1985, Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association.

[57]  R. Cartwright,et al.  Occupational bladder cancer and cigarette smoking in West Yorkshire. , 1981, British journal of urology.

[58]  J. Jamart,et al.  Tobacco and occupation as risk factors in bladder cancer: A case‐control study in southern belgium , 1987, International journal of cancer.

[59]  N. Muñoz,et al.  Tobacco smoking, occupational exposure and bladder cancer in Argentina , 1987, International journal of cancer.

[60]  L. Kolonel,et al.  Smoking, alcohol, occupation, and hair dye use in cancer of the lower urinary tract. , 1989, American journal of epidemiology.