Literature DB >> 2537054

Histopathology of sinonasal and lung cancers in nickel refinery workers.

F W Sunderman1, L G Morgan, A Andersen, D Ashley, F A Forouhar.   

Abstract

Histopathological diagnoses were compiled for 100 sinonasal cancers and 259 lung cancers in nickel refinery workers, including cases from Wales, Canada, and Norway. The sinonasal cancers comprised squamous cell carcinomas (48 percent), anaplastic and undifferentiated carcinomas (39 percent), adenocarcinomas (6 percent), transitional cell carcinomas (3 percent), and other malignant tumors (4 percent). The lung tumors comprised squamous cell carcinomas (67 percent), anaplastic, small cell, and oat cell carcinomas (15 percent), adenocarcinomas (8 percent), large cell carcinomas (3 percent), other malignant tumors (1 percent), and cancers not otherwise specified (6 percent). Possible selection bias in these data cannot be excluded, since the histological diagnoses represent 63 percent, 68 percent, and 100 percent of cases of sinonasal cancer and 24 percent, 47 percent, and 86 percent of cases of lung cancer in the Welsh, Canadian, and Norwegian workers. This study suggests that (a) the sinonasal cancers in nickel refinery workers conformed to the usual distribution of histological types observed in the general population (in contrast to the predilection for adenocarcinomas in wood workers), and (b) the lung cancers in nickel-refinery workers showed preponderance of squamous cell carcinomas and deficit of adenocarcinomas, compared to prevalent proportions of these neoplasms, possibly reflecting the paucity of women in the cohorts and temporal trends during the six decades in which the tumors were diagnosed.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2537054

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Clin Lab Sci        ISSN: 0091-7370            Impact factor:   1.256


  3 in total

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Authors:  Hsien-Hung Huang; Jing-Yang Huang; Chia-Chi Lung; Chih-Lung Wu; Chien-Chang Ho; Yi-Hua Sun; Pei-Chieh Ko; Shih-Yung Su; Shih-Chang Chen; Yung-Po Liaw
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2013-04-10       Impact factor: 3.295

3.  Upregulation of SQSTM1/p62 contributes to nickel-induced malignant transformation of human bronchial epithelial cells.

Authors:  Haishan Huang; Junlan Zhu; Yang Li; Liping Zhang; Jiayan Gu; Qipeng Xie; Honglei Jin; Xun Che; Jingxia Li; Chao Huang; Lung-Chi Chen; Jianxin Lyu; Jimin Gao; Chuanshu Huang
Journal:  Autophagy       Date:  2016-07-28       Impact factor: 16.016

  3 in total

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