Literature DB >> 11418084

The interaction of asbestos and smoking in lung cancer.

F D Liddell1.   

Abstract

Both cigarette smoke and inhaled asbestos fibres can cause lung cancer, but the assessment of how these agents act in combination is a matter of great difficulty. In non-smokers, the condition is so rare that, in any cohort of asbestos workers, the standardised mortality ratio (SMR, that is the ratio of the numbers of deaths observed and expected) is quite imprecise. The SMR for smokers, with which it has to be compared, is also subject to sampling error, making the interaction even more unstable. This accounts for much of the variation that has bedevilled evaluation. The debate has been concentrated on two hypotheses: additive (asbestos and cigarette smoke act independently) and multiplicative (asbestos produces an effect proportional to the effect of smoking). The very few data available until 1977 failed to fit the former and fitted the latter only poorly. They would have fitted better a hypothesis of greater synergism, but the only one proposed was too convoluted. So the multiplicative model appeared the only alternative, and was deemed 'accepted'. The ratio of lung cancer SMRs for non-smokers and smokers was generalised into the relative asbestos effect, RAE, with all the advantages of a parametric statistic (Berry et al., 1985, British Journal of Industrial Medicine 42, 12). On the multiplicative hypothesis, RAE=1, while RAE>1 indicates less synergism. The RAEs for the three most recent of the six results then available were >1; for one, P<0.005. From the six results combined, it was concluded that 'overall non-smokers have a relative risk of lung cancer due to asbestos that is 1.8 times that of smokers'. Some admitted uncertainty about the figure 1.8 was seized upon and even the thrust of the conclusion has been very largely disregarded. So too has the RAE and all its benefits. As a result, all later reviewers have been led into error, much of it serious: in particular, they have failed to appreciate how much of the variation arises from the inevitable imprecision of all RAEs. This failure led reviewers in 1994 to discard, quite without justification, those interactions which were less than multiplicative and came from cohort studies. Although case-referent studies seemed to support the multiplicative hypothesis, the information from them is essentially unreliable. Thus it cannot weaken the conclusions from the cohort studies, that the multiplicative hypothesis is untenable and that the relative risk of lung cancer from asbestos exposure is about twice as high in non-smokers as in smokers; the best estimate of RAE is 2.04, with 95% confidence interval 1.28-3.25. This finding is not only of high statistical significance but of great social and scientific importance.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11418084

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg        ISSN: 0003-4878


  10 in total

1.  Chapter 6: Lung cancer in never smokers: epidemiology and risk prediction models.

Authors:  William J McCarthy; Rafael Meza; Jihyoun Jeon; Suresh H Moolgavkar
Journal:  Risk Anal       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 4.000

2.  The risk of lung cancer with increasing time since ceasing exposure to asbestos and quitting smoking.

Authors:  A Reid; N H de Klerk; G L Ambrosini; G Berry; A W Musk
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 4.402

3.  Occupational exposure to asbestos and lung cancer in men: evidence from a population-based case-control study in eight Canadian provinces.

Authors:  Paul J Villeneuve; Marie-Élise Parent; Shelley A Harris; Kenneth C Johnson
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2012-12-13       Impact factor: 4.430

4.  Silica dust, diesel exhaust, and painting work are the significant occupational risk factors for lung cancer in nonsmoking Chinese men.

Authors:  L A Tse; It-S Yu; J S K Au; H Qiu; X-R Wang
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2010-11-23       Impact factor: 7.640

Review 5.  Absence of multiplicative interactions between occupational lung carcinogens and tobacco smoking: a systematic review involving asbestos, crystalline silica and diesel engine exhaust emissions.

Authors:  Mohamad El Zoghbi; Pascale Salameh; Isabelle Stücker; Patrick Brochard; Fleur Delva; Aude Lacourt
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2017-02-02       Impact factor: 3.295

6.  Exposure-Response Analyses of Asbestos and Lung Cancer Subtypes in a Pooled Analysis of Case-Control Studies.

Authors:  Ann C Olsson; Roel Vermeulen; Joachim Schüz; Hans Kromhout; Beate Pesch; Susan Peters; Thomas Behrens; Lützen Portengen; Dario Mirabelli; Per Gustavsson; Benjamin Kendzia; Josue Almansa; Veronique Luzon; Jelle Vlaanderen; Isabelle Stücker; Florence Guida; Dario Consonni; Neil Caporaso; Maria Teresa Landi; John Field; Irene Brüske; Heinz-Erich Wichmann; Jack Siemiatycki; Marie-Elise Parent; Lorenzo Richiardi; Franco Merletti; Karl-Heinz Jöckel; Wolfgang Ahrens; Hermann Pohlabeln; Nils Plato; Adonina Tardón; David Zaridze; John McLaughlin; Paul Demers; Neonila Szeszenia-Dabrowska; Jolanta Lissowska; Peter Rudnai; Eleonora Fabianova; Rodica Stanescu Dumitru; Vladimir Bencko; Lenka Foretova; Vladimir Janout; Paolo Boffetta; Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita; Francesco Forastiere; Thomas Brüning; Kurt Straif
Journal:  Epidemiology       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 4.822

7.  Position Paper on Asbestos of the Italian Society of Occupational Medicine.

Authors:  Pietro Apostoli; Paolo Boffetta; Massimo Bovenzi; Pier Luigi Cocco; Dario Consonni; Alfonso Cristaudo; Gianluigi Discalzi; Andrea Farioli; Maurizio Manno; Stefano Mattioli; Enrico Pira; Leonardo Soleo; Giuseppe Taino; Francesco Saverio Violante; Carlo Zocchetti
Journal:  Med Lav       Date:  2019-12-17       Impact factor: 1.275

8.  Decision tree of occupational lung cancer using classification and regression analysis.

Authors:  Tae-Woo Kim; Dong-Hee Koh; Chung-Yill Park
Journal:  Saf Health Work       Date:  2010-12-30

9.  Can lessons from public health disease surveillance be applied to environmental public health tracking?

Authors:  Beate Ritz; Ira Tager; John Balmes
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 9.031

10.  Pulmonary Function and CT Scan Imaging at Low-Level Occupational Exposureto Asbestos.

Authors:  Giannina Satta; Tiziana Serra; Federico Meloni; Achille Lazzarato; Alessandra Argiolas; Elisa Bosu; Antonella Coratza; Nicola Frau; Michele Lai; Luigi Isaia Lecca; Nicola Mascia; Ilaria Pilia; Veronica Piras; Giovanni Sferlazzo; Marcello Campagna; Pierluigi Cocco
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-12-19       Impact factor: 3.390

  10 in total

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