| Literature DB >> 25264933 |
Helmut Greim1, Mark J Utell, L Daniel Maxim, Ron Niebo.
Abstract
In 2011, SCOEL classified RCF as a secondary genotoxic carcinogen and supported a practical threshold. Inflammation was considered the predominant manifestation of RCF toxicity. Intrapleural and intraperitoneal implantation induced mesotheliomas and sarcomas in laboratory animals. Chronic nose-only inhalation bioassays indicated that RCF exposure in rats increased the incidence of lung cancer and similar exposures resulted in mesothelioma in hamsters, but these studies may have been compromised by overload. Epidemiological studies in the US and Europe showed an association between exposure and prevalence of respiratory symptoms and pleural plaques, but no interstitial fibrosis, mesotheliomas, or increased numbers of lung tumors were observed. As the latency of asbestos induced mesotheliomas can be up to 50 years, the relationship between RCF exposure and respiratory malignances has not been fully determined. Nonetheless, it is possible to offer useful perspectives. RCF and rock wool have similar airborne fiber dimensions and biopersistence. Therefore, it is likely that these fibers have similar toxicology. Traditional rock wool has been the subject of numerous cohort and case control studies. For rock wool, IARC (2002) concluded that the epidemiological studies did not provide evidence of carcinogenicity. Based on analogies with rock wool (read across), it is reasonable to believe that increases in lung cancer or any mesotheliomas are unlikely to be found in the RCF-exposed cohort. RCF producers have developed a product stewardship program to measure and control fiber concentrations and to further understand the health status of their workers.Entities:
Keywords: Biopersistence; epidemiology; fiber dimensions; mesothelioma; pleural plaques; refractory ceramic fiber; rock wool
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25264933 PMCID: PMC4245174 DOI: 10.3109/08958378.2014.953276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inhal Toxicol ISSN: 0895-8378 Impact factor: 2.724
Figure 1.Diameter and length distribution of 4031 airborne respirable RCF fibers from workplace samples.
RCF fiber diameter and length data.
| Number of fibers | 4031 Diameters (µm) | 4031 Lengths (µm) |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum | 0.070 | 5.000 |
| Maximum | 3.000 | 138.000 |
| Range | 2.930 | 133.000 |
| Geometric mean | 0.911 | 17.406 |
| Median | 1.000 | 16.670 |
| Arithmetic Mean | 1.091 | 22.428 |
| Std. Error | 0.010 | 0.285 |
| Standard Dev | 0.616 | 18.088 |
| Variance | 0.379 | 327.189 |
| Coefficient of variation (CV) | 0.565 | 0.807 |
| Skewness (G1) | 0.755 | 2.071 |
| SE Skewness | 0.039 | 0.039 |
| Kurtosis (G2) | 0.011 | 5.131 |
| SE Kurtosis | 0.077 | 0.077 |
Parameters of the size distribution of rock wool reported by Schneider et al. (1985).
| Site | Number of samples | Geometric mean diameter (µm) | Geometric standard deviation | Geometric mean length (µm) | Geometric standard deviation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rock wool Plant A | 6 | 0.95 | 3.1 | 13 | 3.4 |
| Rock wool Plant B | 38 | 0.99 | 3.3 | 14 | 3.6 |
| Use of Rock wool | 21 | 1.20 | 2.7 | 22 | 4.0 |
Comparison of fiber diameters (microns) for RCF and rock wool from different sources.
| Fiber | Geometric mean diameter | Median diameter | Arithmetic mean diameter | Source | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCF | 0.91 | 1.00 | 1.09 |
| |
| Rock/Slag wool | <3 | Corn et al. ( | Median overstated because non-respirable fibers counted. | ||
| 0.5–1.5 | Esmen et al. ( | Median values vary with nominal diameter of bulk fibers. | |||
| 2.2 | Robinson et al. ( | Single plant using spinning process measured by PCOM. | |||
| 0.95–1.2 | Schneider et al. ( | Reported values vary with plant and process. | |||
| 1.2–2 | Cherrie et al. ( | Median diameters varied with plant. | |||
| 1.0 | Krantz ( | Mean diameters ranged from 0.57 to 1.77 µm among ten plants. | |||
| 0.3–1.9 | IARC ( | Range from various studies cited in this publication. | |||
| 1.12 | 1.27 | Campopiano et al. ( | SEM measurements on workers installing ceiling panels. |
Comparison of fiber lengths for RCF and rock wool from different sources.
| Fiber | Geometric mean length | Median length | Arithmetic mean length | Source | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCF | 17.4 | 16.7 | 22.4 | This study | See |
| Rock/Slag wool | ∼20 | Corn et al. ( | Values shown are approximate. | ||
| 12–30 | Esmen et al. ( | Median values are approximate as read from graph. | |||
| 16 | Robinson et al. ( | Single plant using spinning process measured by PCOM. | |||
| 13–22 | Schneider et al. ( | Reported values vary with plant and process. | |||
| 10–20 | Cherrie et al. ( | Median lengths varied with plant. | |||
| 10–30 | Krantz ( | Range is approximate as read from graph. | |||
| 7–22 | IARC ( | Range from various studies cited in this publication. | |||
| 27.77 | 28.05 | 37.52 | Campopiano et al. ( | SEM measurements on workers installing ceiling panels. |
Occurrence of pleural plaques among males exposed to mineral wool.
| Exposed to mineral wool | Not exposed | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group (years) | Workers | Workers with plaques | Frequency (%) | Referents | Referents with plaques | Frequency (%) |
| 20–29 | 202 | 0 | 0.00 | 159 | 0 | 0.00 |
| 30–39 | 215 | 1 | 0.47 | 136 | 0 | 0.00 |
| 40–49 | 138 | 2 | 1.45 | 107 | 0 | 0.00 |
| 50–59 | 122 | 6 | 4.92 | 86 | 2 | 2.33 |
| 60–69 | 77 | 3 | 3.90 | 53 | 1 | 1.89 |
| All | 754 | 12 | 1.59 | 541 | 3 | 0.55 |
Summary of data from Järvholm et al. (1995).
Similarities and differences between RCF and rock wool.
| Comparison | ||
|---|---|---|
| Physical properties | Biopersistence | RCF and rock wool have nearly identical biopersistence as measured by WT1/2 values from short term inhalation exposures with rats. |
| Airborne fiber dimensions | Though bulk fiber diameters differ, diameters of airborne fibers from personal monitoring samples are quite similar. Fiber lengths of RCF and rock wool are similar. | |
| Breakage mechanism | Both RCF and rock wool break transversely rather than longitudinally. Thus, any breakage results in fibers that are more easily removed by macrophages. | |
| Animal studies | IP studies | IP studies of rats show that exposure to both RCF and rock wool result in the development of tumors. |
| Inhalation studies | A well-done chronic bioassay of rats exposed (nose-only) to rock wool (MMVF21) resulted in mild fibrosis, but no tumors. A similar study on RCF resulted in both fibrosis and tumors, although the result may have been undermined by overload resulting from exposure to a test article with a non-representative ratio of particles to fibers. | |
| Epidemiological studies | Pleural plaques | Exposure to RCF results in a dose-dependent statistically significant increase in the frequency of pleural plaques. Limited data on rock wool exposure resulted in an increase in the frequency of pleural plaques in exposed workers that was not statistically significant. |
| Interstitial Fibrosis | No interstitial fibrosis seen in cohorts exposed to either rock wool or RCF. | |
| Increased lung cancer or mesothelioma | Mortality studies fail to indicate any increase in either lung cancer or mesothelioma among cohorts exposed to either RCF or mesothelioma. The statistical power of the rock wool studies is much larger, however. |
Mesothelioma latency as reported in various studies and review articles listed in chronological order.
| Mean (Years) | Median (Years) | Range | Cohort | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NR | NR | NR | Article claims that latency period is approximately 35 years. | Selikoff et al. ( |
| 24–36 | Canadian gas mask assembly workers. Study reports ranges from other studies as 20–35 years and 6–44 years. | McDonald & McDonald ( | ||
| 32.3 | 14–57 | 144 workers with mesothelioma in UK factories using asbestos in manufacturing and insulation. | Browne & Smither ( | |
| 37 | 19–68 | Cancer registry of Norway. | Mowé et al. ( | |
| 35–40 | Study of mesothelioma in Great Britain in 1968–1983 concludes that the median latency is 35–40 years. | Jones et al. ( | ||
| 32 | 11 to >50 | 1105 workers in 24 cohorts summarized in this review; latency exceed 20 years in 96% of all cases. | Lanphear & Buncher ( | |
| 33 | 24–43 | Shipyard workers in Sweden | Sandén et al. ( | |
| 48.1 | Cohort from Uppsala, Sweden | Hillerdal ( | ||
| 30–40 | Inhabitants of the Metsovo area, north-west Greece | Sakellariou et al. ( | ||
| 41.4 | <30 | 15–67 | 168 mesothelioma cases in south east England | Yates et al. ( |
| NR | NR | NR | Review article, claims that “extensive research revealed a latency period of 30–45 years in most cases”. | Baas et al. ( |
| 37.4 | 4–66 | Different groups in Australia | Yeung et al. ( | |
| 39.7 | 42 | 17–60 | Three cases in UK | Attanoos et al. ( |
| 48.8 | 51.0 | 14–75 | 380 cases of malignant pleural mesothelioma in the Trieste–Monfalcone area, 1968–2000. | Bianchi et al. ( |
| >40 | Mean latency times greater than 40 years among subjects occupationally exposed to asbestos were reported by the French Mesothelioma Registry. | Desoubeaux ( | ||
| Latency reported to be 40–50 years for asbestos related mesothelioma in Japan. | Morinaga et al. ( | |||
| NR 37.6 | 43.0 NR | 20–49 NR | Review article covers two small occupationally exposed Japanese cohorts. | Morinaga et al. ( |
| 37.8 | 11–68 | 821 cases from German mesothelioma register. | Neumann et al. ( | |
| ∼39 | 11 to >50 | 800 among 1517 cases of mesothelioma from various cohorts. | Suzuki ( | |
| 44.9 51.0 12.3 | Workers in South African mines Crocidolite miners Amosite miners Miners exposed to both crocidolite and amosite | Carbone et al. ( | ||
| 56 both sexes | Turkish cohort living in a rural area. | Metintas et al. ( | ||
| 48.5 | 301 cases of mesothelioma between 1979 and 1999 in workers from the Devonport Naval Dockyard; the mean was lower (42 years) among more heavily exposed trades. | Hilliard et al. ( | ||
| 46 SD 11 years | 22 mesothelioma cases in Hong Kong. | Chang et al. ( | ||
| 10 cases of mesothelioma among patients <40 years old | Kane et al. ( | |||
| 48.8 29.6 | 19 51 29 | 14–75 28–32 | Review article covers several cohorts 400 pleural mesotheliomas in Italy Insulation workers in Italian cohort | Bianchi & Bianchi ( |
| 52.6 | 53.0 | 32–64 | 215 cases of malignant pleural mesothelioma were diagnosed at the Hospital of Monfalcone, Italy. | Bianchi et al. ( |
| 43.7 men 42.8 women | 1941 cases of mesothelioma (pleural and peritoneal) in New South Wales, Australia. | Hyland et al. ( | ||
| 44.6 | Italian register | Marinaccio et al. ( | ||
| 34.8 48.7 55.3 37.1 46.0 50.8 44.9 | 33.0 51.0 56.0 33.0 47.5 55.0 46.0 | 27–49 13–73 35–71 25–60 28–69 27–62 25–64 | 801 pleural mesotheliomas diagnosed in hospitals in the Trieste and Monfalcone districts of Italy. Latency estimates varied with cohort as shown below: Insulation Shipbuilding Maritime trades Port activities Other industries Domestic exposure Other | Bianchi & Bianchi ( |
| 8.5 | 8.5 | Case report of single bystander exposed to a site at which asbestos-containing materials were being dismantled | Bitchatchi et al. ( | |
| 36.9 | <10 to >60 | 679 cases from GB Asbestosis and Mesothelioma Registers | Harding & Darnton ( | |
| 36.8 | Former workers and residents exposed to crocidolite at Wittenoom, Western Australia. | Aboagye-Sarfo et al. ( | ||
| 48.5 | 18–70 | 238 cases of malignant mesothelioma for which latency was estimated for 191 cases. | Haber & Haber ( | |
| 36.9 39.8 43.7 39.7 33.1 | Estimates given for various cohorts: Wittenoom workers 95% CI (31.4–42.3) Other asbestos workers 95% CI (34.3–45.2) Wittenoom residents 95% CI (38.0–49.5) Other non-occupational 95% CI (33.9–45.6) Home renovators 95% CI (27.5–38.8) | Olsen et al. ( | ||
| 48.3 | 25–68 | Shipyard workers in Monfalcone | Bianchi & Bianchi ( | |
| NR | 43 | 13–81 | 929 clinically confirmed deaths due to mesothelioma | Gemba et al. ( |
| NR | 22.8 | NR | 614 mesotheliomas deaths (between 1978 and 2005) among asbestos workers in the UK; latency approximately 29% longer for females compared to males. Median latencies vary among other groups from 8.2 to 34 years | Frost ( |
NR = not reported.
Studies of cancer in workers exposed to rock (stone) and wool and slag wool.
| Reference, plants | Description, employment, follow-up | No. of deaths, cases (controls), type of cancer | Exposure categories | No. of cases | Relative risks (95% CI) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Marsh et al. ( | 1846 male workers | 73 deaths from respiratory cancer | Time since first employment <10 years 10–19 years 20–29 years ≥30 years Duration of employment <10 years 10–19 years 20–29 years ≥30 years | 2 13 24 34 38 15 11 9 | SMR 1.36 [1.06–1.71] 0.89 1.56 1.37 1.32 1.43 [1.01–1.96] 1.46 1.18 1.18 | Local rates Local rates |
| Marsh et al. ( | 71 deaths from respiratory cancer (68 in men) 32 deaths from respiratory cancer | Time since first employment | 2 13 23 30 3 8 21 | SMR 0.58 1.22 1.35 1.06 0.95 [0.20–2.78] 1.41 [0.61–2.78] 1.71 [1.06–2.61] | Local rates Asbestos exposure | |
| Marsh et al. ( | Follow-up until 1989 | Duration of employment | 39 15 8 6 15 7 10 | SMR 1.14 1.34 1.07 0.89 1.32 2.02 1.61 | ||
| Marsh et al. ( | 107 male controls 101 male controls | Cumulative exposure to respiratory fibers <3 fibers/cm3-months 3–14 fibers/cm3-months 15–39 fibers/cm3-months ≥40 fibers/cm3-months <3 fibers/cm3-months 3–14 fibers/cm3-months 15–39 fibers/cm3-months ≥40 fibers/cm3-months | Odds ratio 1.0 0.70 0.59 0.71 1.0 0.64 0.55 0.58 | Unadjusted for smoking | ||
|
| ||||||
| Duration of employment | Odds ratio | |||||
| 1 plant | O-cohort 24 deaths | 47 controls 31 controls | <2 years 2–4 years 5–19 years ≥20 years <2 years 2–4 years 5–19 years ≥20 years | 1.0 1.62 0.23 0.85 1.0 1.82 0.33 0.73 | Smokers only | |
| Odds ratio | NIOSH exposure classification | |||||
| Wong et al. ( | 55 men who died from lung cancer | 98 male controls who had died from other causes | Exposed/unexposed Exposed ≥ 7 fibers/cm3-months Exposed < 7 fibers/cm3-months | 50 27 | 0.90 (0.23–3.49) 0.94 (0.23–3.78) 0.86 (0.42–1.79) 0.98 (0.47–2.04) | Unadjusted for smoking Adjusted for smoking Unadjusted for smoking Adjusted for smoking |
|
| ||||||
| SMR | ||||||
| Plato et al. ( | 1569 male and female workers employed | 13 deaths from lung cancer | Duration of employment with 20-year lag: <2 years 2–9 years 10–19 years ≥20 years Plant-specific cumulative fiber exposure (fibers/cm3-years): <1 1–2 >2 | 1 5 1 2 7 4 2 | [1.57 (0.83–2.68)] [1.02 (0.55–1.75)] 1.10 (0.28–6.12) 2.69 (0.87–6.27) 0.87 (0.02–4.89) 1.43 (0.17–5.16) SMR 2.01 (0.81–4.13) 2.45 (0.67–6.21) 0.62 (0.08–2.24) | Local rates National rates Local rates |
| Plato et al. ( | Follow-up 1958–1989 for incidence | 13 cases of lung cancer 13 cases of stomach cancer | Duration of employment: <2 years 2–9 years 10–19 years ≥20 years | 1 7 3 2 | SIR 0.69 (0.02–3.84) 2.12 (0.85–4.37) 1.63 (0.34–4.76) 1.61 (0.20–5.83) SIR 1.71 (0.91–2.93) | Local rates Local rates |
| Boffetta et al. ( | 4912 male and female workers | 97 deaths from lung cancer | Time since first employment: ≤9 years 10–19 years 20–29 years ≥30 years Duration of employment 1–4 years 5–9 years 10–19 years ≥20 years Technological phase Late Intermediate Early | 10 26 29 32 31 21 21 24 76 12 9 | SMR 1.34 (1.08–1.63) Relative risk | National rates Adjusted for age, calendar year, country, technological phase and duration of employment. |
| Boffetta et al. ( | 8 deaths from oral cancer +cancer of the pharynx; 6 deaths from cancer of the larynx; 8 deaths from cancer of the oesophagu | SMR 1.33 (0.57–2.61) 1.96 (0.72–4.27) 1.25 (0.54–2.46) | National rates | |||
| Consonni et al. ( | 9603 male workers employed until 1977 follow-up until 1990–1991 | 159 deaths from lung cancer 97 deaths from lung cancer in workers with ≥1 year of employment | Cumulative exposure ≤0.007 fiber/cm3-years 0.008–0.136 fiber/cm3-years 0.137–1.367 fiber/cm3-years >1.368 fibers/cm3-years ≤0.139 fiber/cm3-years 0.140–0.729 fiber/cm3-years 0.730–2.622 fibers/cm3-years >2.622 fibers/cm3-years | 39 40 40 40 25 24 24 24 | Relative risk | Adjusted for age, calendar period, country, time since first employment and employment status. |
| Boffetta et al. ( | 3685 male and female workers | 73 cases of lung cancer 31 cases of cancer of the oral cavity, pharynx or larynx | Time since first employment: ≤9 years 10–19 years 20–29 years ≥30 years Duration of employment (15-year lag) 1–4 years 5–9 years 10–19 years ≥20 years Technological phase Late Intermediate Early | 7 21 25 20 33 11 10 5 50 14 9 | SIR 1.08 (0.85–1.36) Relative risk | National rates Adjusted for ages, gender, country and technological phase |
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| Kjaerheim et al. ( | 133 cases of lung cancer, rock (stone) wool/slag wool male workers employed 1937–1976, follow-up 1971–1996 | 513 male controls | Cumulative fiber exposure in quartiles | 33 32 33 34 12 3 26 34 36 36 30 30 23 5 18 29 | Odds ratio 1.0 0.86 (0.47–1.56) 0.91 (0.51–1.63) 0.51 (0.28–0.93) 1.0 2.08 (0.36–11.91) 0.85 (0.34–2.15) 0.52 (0.21–1.30) 1.0 1.25 (0.66–2.34) 1.02 (0.54–1.93) 0.67 (0.35–1.27) 1.0 2.00 (0.41–9.83) 0.76 (0.27–2.17)\⊂ 0.63 (0.28–1.42) | Although after the IARC meeting, this was included in the IARC Monograph. Adjusted for age, country and tobacco smoking. |
| Kjaerheim et al. ( | Duration of exposure in rock (stone)/slag wool industry | 7 58 32 35 6 2 32 35 28 51 28 25 18 4 28 25 | Odds ratio 1.0 1.24 (0.47–3.26) 0.86 (0.32–2.31) 0.85 (0.32–2.26) 1.0 0.51 (0.05–5.50) 0.60 (0.17–2.08) 0.65 (0.20–2.12) 1.0 1.57 (0.82–2.99) 1.20 (0.61–2.34) 0.97 (0.48–2.00) 1.0 1.06 (0.21–5.30) 1.01 (0.44–2.34) 0.98 (0.39–2.47) |
| ||
| Baccarelli et al. ( | Lifetime job-specific exposure measurements were available for 15 organic, 15 man-made and 28 natural-inorganic agents | 540 lung cancer cases and 582 controls from the 1993–1998 autopsy records. | Various exposure categories including those exposed to MMVFs | 1.82 (0.88–3.75) | All MMVFs pooled, RSW not included as specific category. | |
| Carel et al. ( | Multi-center case-control study of lung cancer and exposure to asbestos and MMVFs | 16 centers in six Central and Eastern European countries and the UK during the period 1998–2002, 115 cases and 89 controls exposed to MMVF | Low exposure intensity Medium High Year of first exposure ∼1960 1961–1970 1971–1980 1981–1990 1991– Overall | 73 34 8 45 30 25 11 4 | 1.23 (0.82–1.84 1.28 (0.70–2.34) 1.02 (0.31–3.33) 1.36 (0.80–2.31) 1.09 (0.60–1.97) 1.05 (0.54–2.03) 1.64 (0.54–4.96) 1.57 (0.25–9.88) 1.23 (0.88–1.71) | All MMVFs pooled. |
| Pintos et al. ( | Two case control studies in Montreal, Canada studying effects of exposure on lung cancer | 1144 controls/922 cases in cohort 1; 978 controls/809 cases in study 2 | Non-exposed Any exposure Non-substantial level Substantial level | 1425 153 129 24 | 1.00 1.05 (0.80–1.40) 1.10 (0.81–1.49) 0.86 (0.45–1.63) | All MMVFs pooled. Figures at left refer to both cohorts pooled. |
| Lacourt et al. ( | Cases came from hospital-based case-control study performed between 1987 and 1996 or identified through the French National Mesothelioma Surveillance Program. | Cases and controls varied with type of exposure studied; table at right is one of several related to MMVF exposure | Not exposed Exposed Exposure duration (years) 0–7 7–18 18–32 >32 | 474 725 144 173 164 244 | 1.00 1.8 (1.5–2.3) 1.6 (1.2–2.1) 1.8 (1.3–2.4) 1.3 (1.0–1.9) 3.5 (2.5–4.9) | Study considered exposure to asbestos, MMVF and silica. Exposure to all MMVFs pooled. See critical comments by Bonde ( |
SMR, standardized mortality ratio; SIR, standardized incidence ratio; respiratory cancer, ICD-8, 160–163.
Employed for ≥ 1 year.
Poisson regression analysis.