| Literature DB >> 24185840 |
Emily Goswami1, Valerie Craven, David L Dahlstrom, Dominik Alexander, Fionna Mowat.
Abstract
Inhalation of asbestos resulting from living with and handling the clothing of workers directly exposed to asbestos has been established as a possible contributor to disease. This review evaluates epidemiologic studies of asbestos-related disease or conditions (mesothelioma, lung cancer, and pleural and interstitial abnormalities) among domestically exposed individuals and exposure studies that provide either direct exposure measurements or surrogate measures of asbestos exposure. A meta-analysis of studies providing relative risk estimates (n = 12) of mesothelioma was performed, resulting in a summary relative risk estimate (SRRE) of 5.02 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.48-10.13). This SRRE pertains to persons domestically exposed via workers involved in occupations with a traditionally high risk of disease from exposure to asbestos (i.e., asbestos product manufacturing workers, insulators, shipyard workers, and asbestos miners). The epidemiologic studies also show an elevated risk of interstitial, but more likely pleural, abnormalities (n = 6), though only half accounted for confounding exposures. The studies are limited with regard to lung cancer (n = 2). Several exposure-related studies describe results from airborne samples collected within the home (n = 3), during laundering of contaminated clothing (n = 1) or in controlled exposure simulations (n = 5) of domestic exposures, the latter of which were generally associated with low-level chrysotile-exposed workers. Lung burden studies (n = 6) were also evaluated as a surrogate of exposure. In general, available results for domestic exposures are lower than the workers' exposures. Recent simulations of low-level chrysotile-exposed workers indicate asbestos levels commensurate with background concentrations in those exposed domestically.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24185840 PMCID: PMC3863863 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph10115629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Case reports and series of mesothelioma in domestically exposed populations.
| Author and Year | Population Studied | Occupation of Worker(s) | Results | Exposure Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wagner | 33 Pleural mesothelioma cases in Northwest Cape Province (South Africa) | Crocidolite miners | 25/33 cases had non-occupational exposure (76%). | Nearly exclusively neighborhood exposure |
| Lieben & Pistawka 1967 [ | 42 Pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma cases in southeast Pennsylvania | Insulation plant workers | 3/42 (7%) cases had domestic exposure: | Amosite and chrysotile |
| Rusby 1968 [ | Pleural mesothelioma in mother of factory workers | Asbestos factory workers | Mother of 3 daughters who worked in an asbestos factory | Laundered clothing for 1–2 years, 26 years prior; no other asbestos contact |
| Heller | 10 Pleural mesothelioma cases at Massachusetts General Hospital 1960–1967 | Pipefitter | 1 woman (10%) washed her pipefitter husband’s dusty work clothes; husband had asbestosis | Clothes washing |
| Bittersohl and Ose 1971 [ | Wife of a chemical plant worker | Chemical plant worker | 1 woman with pleural mesothelioma whose husband was exposed to asbestos insulation at a chemical plant | Clothes washing |
| Champion 1971 [ | Son of lagger | Lagger | Patient was never occupationally exposed to asbestos; father was a lagger who wore work overalls home; emphysematous changes seen in mother; sister had pleural plaques. | --- |
| Knappmann 1972 [ | Brother of asbestos worker | Asbestos factory worker | Case report of mesothelioma in a man who lived for several years with his sister who was an asbestos worker | --- |
| Greenberg & Davies 1974 [ | 246 Pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma cases in England, Wales, Scotland (1967–1968) | Asbestos factory workers | 2/246 (0.8%) with potential domestic exposures: | Cases had 2 and 14 years of exposure, respectively |
| Lillington | Mesothelioma in husband and wife | Industrial exposure to asbestos | Husband had “industrial exposure”, wife washed his clothes; both were diagnosed with pleural mesothelioma | Clothes washing |
| Milne 1976 [ | 32 Pleural mesothelioma cases in Victoria, Australia | Asbestos cement factory | 1/32 cases (3%) had domestic exposure; father worked in asbestos cement plant. | --- |
| Edge & Chaudhury 1978 [ | 50 Mesothelioma cases from Barrow in Furness (British shipbuilding town; 1966–1976) | Shipyard plumber | 1/50 (2%) was married to a shipyard plumber. | Crocidolite |
| Li | Family in which father was pipe insulator in a shipyard. | Shipyard insulator | Father had asbestosis and lung cancer; wife washed his clothes and had mesothelioma; | Clothes washing |
| Epler | 2 wives of asbestos workers | Asbestos factory workers | Mesothelioma in 2 wives of asbestos workers: | --- |
| Vianna | 288 pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma cases in NY state (1973–1978) | Farmers, fireman | 7/288 (2.4%) cases with potential indirect exposure (1 male, 6 females); | --- |
| Martensson | Two children of an asbestos worker | Foundry worker | Female with no occupational exposure; | Exposure referred to as “slight household asbestos exposure during childhood”. |
| Krousel | Mother, daughter, and son with pleural mesothelioma | Factory workers | Mother worked as clothing sales person and candle-maker. First husband and second husband worked at lumber/shingle company. Family lived within a mile of lumber/shingle company that used asbestos wrap on pipes. Daughter worked as phone operator, husband was electrician. Son worked in submarine, shipyard, cement pipe maker, power company, and carpenter. | No microscopic evidence of asbestos fibers in son and daughter |
| Li | Family of asbestos worker | Insulator | Wife of insulator washed worker's laundry, used cloth sacks that were used to transport insulation as child's diapers. Child died of mesothelioma at age 32; mother died at age 49. Uncle who lived with family as teen and was briefly an insulator, developed mesothelioma at age 43. Father died of asbestosis at age 53. | Clothes washing and insulation cloth sacks as diapers. |
| Kane | 10 Cases of mesothelioma in patients 40 years old and under | Asbestos factory worker, shipyard insulator | 1–18 years of exposure | |
| Konetzke | 48 Cases of mesothelioma from the National Cancer Register in East Germany and 19 cases of pleural plaques were investigated for non-occupational exposure to asbestos | --- | 22/48 (46%) cases caused by cleaning by members of the family of working clothes contaminated with asbestos. | Clothes washing |
| Oern | Sister and husband of asbestos workers | Insulators | Family had 2 brothers, a sister and her husband. All males were insulators; 1 brother had asbestosis, other brother and sister had mesothelioma; woman who cleaned work clothes developed mesothelioma at age 79. | Clothes washing |
| Chellini | 100 Cases of pleural mesothelioma in Tuscany, Italy (1970–1988) | Construction, plumber in chemical manufacturing | 4/100 (4%) cases identified with “possible domestic” exposure—women whose husbands or members of the family were occupationally exposed (3 in construction and one as a plumber in chemical manufacturing) and who used to wash their spouses’ work clothes; same data also reported by Seniori-Constantini & Chellini 1997 [ | Clothes washing |
| Dodoli | 262 Cases of pleural mesothelioma in Leghorn and La Spezia, Italy (1958–1988) | Shipyard workers, oil refinery worker | 10 (3.8%) women washed their relatives’ work clothes (9 shipyard workers, 1 oil refinery worker). | Clothes washing |
| Giarelli | 170 Cases of mesothelioma in Trieste, Italy (1968–1987) | Shipyard workers | 5/170 (2.9%) cases had domestic exposure and cleaned the clothes of their husbands who were shipyard workers. | 80% had no AB |
| Schneider | 5 Pleural mesothelioma cases | Insulation mat manufacturing, turbine revision, roofer, asbestos cardboard manufacturing, and insulator. | “Causal relation established between the mesothelioma and inhalation of asbestos fibers while cleaning contaminated work-clothes and shoes”. | 7–23 years of exposure; cleaning clothes and shoes |
| Seniori-Constantini & Chellini 1997 [ | 335 Pleural mesothelioma cases from registry in Tuscany, Italy (1970–1996) | NR | 30%–35% of 59 female cases were housewives; Same data source as Chellini | NR |
| Rees | 123 Cases in South Africa | Mining workers | 13/123 cases (11%) noted contaminated clothing as source of exposure, along with working with asbestos or living in mining district. “No subject exclusively exposed to contaminated work clothes brought home”. Three cases were reported to have only exposure to asbestos from contaminated clothing. | Mostly crocidolite and amosite; |
| Ascoli | One female mesothelioma case | NR | Domestic exposure, duration of 20 years in an industrial town with a large chemical plant | NR |
| Barbieri | 190 Cases of mesothelioma in Brescia, Italy diagnosed 1980–1999 | Asbestos hauler | 1/190 (0.5%) had domestic exposure; wife of asbestos hauler who washed his clothes | Clothes washing |
| Bianchi | 557 Malignant mesotheliomas of the pleura diagnosed 1968–2000 in the Trieste-Monfalcone area, Italy | Mainly shipbuilding town | 21/65 (32%) females and 0/492 males had histories of domestic exposure, cleaning clothes of an asbestos exposed worker; includes Giarelli | 35% of domestic cases analyzed (n = 20) had AB; |
| Mangone | 323 Pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma cases in Emilia-Romagna, Italy (1996–2001) | NR | 13/325 (4%) were domestically exposed | NR |
| Miller 2005 [ | 32 Pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma cases gathered from law firms (since 1990) | Shipyard workers, insulators, others. | 15 wives, 11 daughters, 3 sons, 1 sister-in-law, 1 niece, 1 boarder; | NR |
| Bianchi | 99 Cases in Trieste, Italy (2001–2006) | NR | 5 cases (5%) identified as “home exposure”, where patients had washed asbestos-exposed husbands’ work clothes | Clothes washing |
AB = Asbestos bodies;
NR = Not reported.
Cohort and case-control studies of mesothelioma in domestically exposed populations.
| Author and Year | Study Design | Population Studied (dates of death/incidence) | Controls/Unexposed | Disease | Fiber Type | Occupation of Worker(s) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newhouse & Thompson 1965 a, b [ | Case-control | 76 cases from London hospital (1956–1963) | 76 “in patient” series (patient in medical and surgical wards of the hospital during early summer 1964) matched by sex and date of birth | PL, PE | Crocidolite, chrysotile, amosite | Spinners, engine room worker, boiler coverer, asbestos factory foreman, docker, railway carriage builder, asbestos factory worker | 9 cases had relative who worked with asbestos (7 pleural, 2 peritoneal) |
| Ashcroft & Heppleston 1970 [ | Case-control | 22 cases in Tyneside (British shipbuilding town) | 46 hospital controls matched for age and sex, free of malignant disease | PL, PE | NR | Asbestos worker | One case was the widow of an asbestos worker who, for a period of 3 years, had come home with asbestos dust on his hair and shoes. |
| McEwen | Case-control | 80 cases from Scotland (1950–1967) | 2 sets of hospital controls with coronary artery disease or lung or gastric cancer, matched for age and sex | PL, PE | For one case: “Blue and white” asbestos | For one case: dock worker | “...only a few [cases] had shared a household with relatives who were known to have worked with asbestos. There was no statistical difference with regard to either household or spare-time exposure to asbestos between the three groups [cases, cancer controls, cardiovascular controls]. One individual case, however, was interesting. The husband of one of the female cases had worked regularly with asbestos, both blue and white, as a dock labourer, and quite frequently had come home with asbestos on his overalls. His wife (the case) had washed them at home”. |
| Rubino | Case-control | 50 cases from Piedmont, Italy (1960–1970) | Patients with same sex, age, and at same institution | PL | NR | Asbestos industry | 3/50 cases had “family exposure” 0/50 controls had “family exposure” |
| Vianna & Polan 1978 [ | Case-control | 52 female NY state residents 20+ year old (1967–1977) | 52 controls matched for age sex, race, marital status, county, year of death, and from non-cancer death | PL, PE | NR | Shoemaker, brake lining worker, pipefitter, heat insulation worker, heat electric wire worker, elevator insulation worker | 10 patients had husbands/fathers working in asbestos industry (9 pleural, 1 peritoneal), whereas their matched controls did not. 1 control had husband working in asbestos industry, whereas their matched case did not: RR = 10 (95% CI = 1.42–37.40) |
| McDonald & McDonald 1980 [ | Case-control | 490 fatalities in Canada (1960–1972) and USA (1972) ascertained through 7,400 pathologists | Matched controls with pulmonary metastases from non-pulmonary malignancy by sex, age, year of death, and hospital | PL, PE | Chrysotile (at least 3 cases) and some amosite | Chrysotile production, insulation, or factory work | 2 males, 6 females exposed to dusty clothing of asbestos worker; |
| Muscat & Wynder 1991 [ | Case-control | 124 cases entering NY City hospital between 1981–1990 | 267 controls with non-tobacco disease, matched for age, sex, hospital, race, month of interview | M | NR | Auto mechanic | 1/16 women without occupational exposure reported domestic contact with asbestos (one husband was auto mechanic); |
| Spirtas | Case-control | 208 cases from Veterans Administration hospital files and Los Angeles county and New York state cancer registries (1975–1980) | 533 controls from death certificates or VA benefit files died of other causes excluding cancer, respiratory disease, suicide, or violence | PL, PE | NR | Asked if “cohabitant ever exposed to asbestos”. | OR for cohabitant ever exposed to asbestos: |
| Howel | Case-control | 185 cases of mesothelioma from mesothelioma and cancer registries and post-mortem records in Yorkshire, England (1979–1991) | 159 controls from necropsy records excluded if had mesothelioma, bronchial or ovarian cancer, or circumstances that made gathering information difficult, matched for age, sex, and year of death | PL, PE | Unknown although crocidolite and amosite identified at factory that provoked concern for the study | NR | ORs for para-occupational exposure: |
| Case | Case-control | 10 female residents aged ≥50 years of Quebec mining regions identified through hospital records (1970–1989) | 150 controls selected from previously interviewed sample matched on age and area | PL | Chrysotile with some tremolite contamination (Thetford mines) | Chrysotile miners | 10 cases identified: 9 (90%) had lived with one or more asbestos workers ( |
| Magnani | Case-control | 53 mesothelioma cases in Italy, Spain, | 232 controls from general population and hospitals without occupational exposure | PL | NR | Asbestos industry | OR for those with domestic exposure |
| Welch | Case-control | 24 male cases treated at Washington Cancer Institute, Washington, DC (1989–2001) | 24 patients with appendical cancer treated at Washington Cancer Institute 1990–2000, matched for age and sex | PE | NR | Same 9 activities specified in Spirtas | 8/24 (33%) cases cohabitated with persons involved in 9 specified “high-risk-for-asbestos-exposure processes” |
| Maule | Case-control | 103 cases from Casale Monferrato, Italy (1987–1993) | 272 controls matched by birth date, sex, vital status, date of death | PL | Crocidolite and chrysotile | Asbestos cement (AC) workers | OR for relative with AC occupation, adjusted for age, sex, and AC occupation: |
| Rake | Case-control | 622 patients in England, Wales and Scotland born since 1925 identified through physician records, cancer research network, and hospital records | 1,420 population controls matched for age and sex | M | Suggests that higher death rate in UK is due to amosite use. | NR | |
| Anderson 1982 [ | Cohort | 2,218 household contacts of Unarco amosite factory workers first employed between 1941–1945; 663 deaths | State of New Jersey, age and sex-specific | M | Amosite | Amosite insulation factory workers | After 30+ years from onset of exposure, mesothelioma deaths in 3/170 (1.8%) deceased household contacts (2 female and 1 male, all children of workers) |
| Ferrante | Cohort | Cohort of 1,780 wives of asbestos cement workers in Casale Monferrato, Italy (deaths from Registrar’s office, incidence from mesothelioma registry) Deaths: 1965–2003Incidence: 1990–2001 | Used age and sex specific rates in Piedmont, Italy for reference | PL, PE | Crocidolite and chrysotile | Asbestos cement workers | Peritoneal cancer SMR = 2.51 (95% CI = 0.52–7.35) |
| Reid | Cohort | Followed 2,552 women and girls who lived in Wittenoom (crocidolite mining town) from 1943 to 1992 and were not involved in mining/milling (1950–2004) | Western Australia female population from 1970–2004 | PL (0 PE) | Crocidolite | Crocidolite miners | The risk of death from mesothelioma was increased, but not significantly, in residents known to have lived with (HR = 2.67, 95% CI = 0.77–9.21) |
| Bourdès | Meta-analysis | Five studies: Yazicioglu | -- | PL | Chrysotile (McDonald & McDonald 1980 [ | -- | Meta RR: 8.1 (95% CI = 5.3–12) |
= Results in bold indicate values used in the meta- analysis;
= Relative risk estimate and/or 95% CI was calculated because it was not provided in the study;
= Appears exposure classification done in a hierarchy, so domestic cases and controls may contain subjects with neighborhood exposure (which itself is statistically significant);
= Potential confounding by neighborhood exposure;
= Potential confounding by occupational exposure;
= Domestic exposure included exposures to asbestos-containing materials at home. Several with “high” domestic exposure included “crushed asbestos material in the courtyard”;
PL = Pleural mesothelioma, PE = Peritoneal mesothelioma, M = Mesothelioma, OR = Odds ratio, RR = Relative risk, CI = Confidence interval, SMR = Standardized mortality ratio; SIR = Standardized incidence ratio, HR = Hazard ratio;
NR = Not reported.
Epidemiologic studies of interstitial and pleural abnormalities in domestically exposed populations.
| Author and Year | Study Design | Population Studied | Comparison Group | Disease | Fiber Type | Occupation of Worker | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Navratil & Trippe 1972 [ | Cohort | 114 Blood relatives of asbestos workmen in Czechoslovakia | “General population” of district N with no known exposure | Pleural calcifications | Chrysotile | Asbestos product plant | 4/114 (3.5%) of blood relatives had pleural calcifications. |
| Anderson 1982 [ | Cohort | 679 Household contacts (no occupational asbestos exposure) of amosite factory workers in Paterson, NJ employed between 1941–1954 | 325 urban NJ residence controls matched by sex, age, and residential community without asbestos exposure | Small opacities (≥1/0) and pleural abnormalities (pleural thickening, pleural calcification, pleural plaques) (1971 ILO | Amosite | Amosite asbestos factory workers | Household resident during index worker employment period. Cases (N = 679): Small opacities = 114 (17%), Pleural abnormalities = 178 (26%), Both = 239 (35%) ( |
| Ferrante | Cohort | Cohort of 1,780 wives of asbestos cement workers in Casale Monferrato, Italy (deaths from Registrar’s office: 1965–2003) | Used age and sex specific rates in Piedmont, Italy for reference | Nonmalignant respiratory disease | Crocidolite and chrysotile | Asbestos cement workers | SMR b = 0.86 (0.47–1.45) |
| Kilburn | Cross-sectional | 274 Wives, 79 sons, and 140 daughters of shipyard workers from Long Beach, CA who started work before 1961. Subjects volunteered and had no occupational exposure. | 1,347 Members of Long Beach Census tract in 1975 and random sample of adult population of Michigan during 1978–1979 without occupational asbestos exposure | Asbestosis and pleural abnormalities (refer to all as asbestosis) (ILO 1980, ≥1/0, and/or presence of pleural thickening or plaques) | NR | Shipyard workers | Asbestosis prevalence: |
| Sider | Cross-sectional | 93 wives > 40 years of age of current and retired insulators screened from January to March 1986 at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago with no occupational exposure | Wives without radiographic abnormalities | Parenchymal opacities and pleural changes according to ILO 1980 | NR | Pipe covers and asbestos removers (insulation workers) | 18/93 (19.4%) demonstrated pleural changes consistent with asbestos exposure: pleural plaques (N = 16, 88.9%), diaphragm plaques (N = 6, 27.8%), pleural calcification (N = 3, 16.6%), and diffuse pleural thickening (N = 1, 5.5%). |
| Peipins | Cross-sectional | 6,668 Participants ≥ 18 years of age who had lived, worked, or played in Libby, MT for at least 6 months before December 31, 1990 | None | Pleural abnormality (any unilateral or bilateral pleuralcalcification on the diaphragm, chest wall, or other site or any unilateral or bilateralpleural thickening or plaque on the chest wall, diaphragm, or costophrenic angle site, consistent with asbestos-related pleural disease, using the PA view, the oblique views, or a combination of those views) and interstitial abnormality (ILO 1980, ≥1/0). | Libby amphibole (tremolite, actinolite, winchite, richterite) | Vermiculite miners | Lived with W.R. Grace workers (n = 1,376): |
ILO = International Labour Organization disease classification;
SMR = Standardized mortality ratio.
Figure 1Meta-analysis of cohort and case-control studies of mesothelioma in domestically exposed populations.
Domestic exposure studies.
| Author and Year | Population or Task Studied | Asbestos Fiber Type | Reported Exposure Information | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Nicholson | Homes of chrysotile miners in Copperopolis, California and Baie Verte, Newfoundland | Chrysotile | Homes of miners: 100 to < 5,000 ng/m3 (approx. 0.003–0.15 f/cc | |
| Selikoff and Lee 1978 [ | Settled dust in asbestos workers’ homes | Amosite | “...small amounts of amosite were found 20–25 years later in the settled dust of asbestos workers' houses from factory operations over the period 1941–1954, and up to 400 yards downwind in the neighboring houses of nonasbestos workers”. | |
| WHO | Asbestos miners’ homes | NR | Residences of asbestos miners in South Africa: | |
|
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| Sawyer | Asbestos abatement workers | Chrysotile | Mean of personal samples (n = 12): 0.4 f/cc (max = 1.2 f/cc) | |
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| Jiang | Unpacking and repacking clutches | Chrysotile | 30 min PCM e -adjusted mean following clothing handling = 0.002 ± 0.002 f/cc (n = 4) | |
| Madl | Unpacking and repacking brakes | Chrysotile | 30 min PCM-adjusted mean (range) following clothing handling (n = 5): | |
| Madl | Mechanics performing brake repair on heavy equipment | Chrysotile | 30 min PCM-adjusted mean (range) following clothing handling: | |
| Mowat | Roofers removing dried material from laundered clothing | Chrysotile | 30 min PCM-E g mean (n = 12): 0.0017 f/cc (range = 0–0.011 f/cc) | |
| Weir | Brake mechanics | Chrysotile | Agitation of operator’s coveralls | |
|
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| Dawson | Women with mesothelioma (n = 170) | Mixed | ||
| Dodson | Women with mesothelioma (n = 15) | Mixed | 4 women had potential domestic exposure through their father’s/husband’s work; | |
| Giarelli | Family members of shipyard workers with mesothelioma in Trieste, Italy | --- | 5/170 (2.9%) cases had domestic exposure, cleaned clothes of spouse:80% had no AB | |
| Gibbs | Mesothelioma cases with para-occupational exposure (n = 13) | Mixed | ||
| Gibbs | Mesothelioma cases without occupational exposure (n = 84). | Mixed | ||
| Gibbs | Mesothelioma cases with para-occupational exposure (n = 10) | Mixed | 9 exposed to their husbands’ work clothes and 1 was the daughter of a man who had died of asbestosis. | |
| Huncharek 1989 [ | Wife of shipyard machinist | Mixed | Chrysotile: 2.5 × 106 f/g | |
| Roggli & Longo 1991 [ | Women whose only known exposure was household contact with an asbestos worker with asbestos-related disease (n = 6) | NR | Household contacts: median = 1,700 AB/g (range, 2–8,200) Uncoated fibers (UF | |
| Roggli 1992 [ | Household contacts with mesothelioma (n = 3) | NR | Wife of shipyard insulator: 8,200 AB/g (29 yr exposure) | |
| Roggli | Household contacts with mesothelioma (asbestosis confirmed in 8.3%) | Mixed | ||
based on conversion factor in NRC 1984;
f/cc = fibers per cubic centimeter;
n = number of samples or cases;
WHO = World Health Organization;
PCM = Phase contrast microscopy;
TWA = time-weighted average;
PCM-E = phase contrast microscopy equivalents;
f/g = fibers per gram lung;
AB = Asbestos bodies;
AC = commercial amphiboles (amosite + crocidolite);
TAA = noncommercial amphiboles (tremolite + actinolite + anthophyllite)
UF = uncoated fiber;
Figure 2Lung-burden studies.