Literature DB >> 30016388

Retrospective Assessment of Respirable Quartz Exposure for a Silicosis Study of the Industrial Sand Industry.

Roy J Rando1, Pamela M Vacek2, Robert E Glenn3, Cheol Woong Kwon1, John E Parker4.   

Abstract

Background: In 2016, the OSHA PEL for crystalline silica was reduced, renewing interest in evaluating risk of silicosis from occupational exposures. The industrial sand industry, which deals with high-purity quartz sands, is the setting for a current epidemiologic investigation of silicosis risk and progression. In support of that investigation, respirable quartz (RQ) exposures were retrospectively estimated for 67 workers with silicosis and 167 matched control workers from 21 industrial sand plants, in which some started work as early as 1929.
Methods: A job exposure matrix (JEM) was constructed by integrating a modern (post-1970) RQ exposure database containing more than 40000 measurements with archival particle count exposure data from a 1947 survey. A simulation algorithm was used to develop a conversion factor to convert the archival particle count data into modern measures of RQ by randomly generating 100000 virtual dust particles of varying diameters corresponding to the size distributions of 14 archival particle size distribution samples. The equivalent respirable mass and particle counts of the virtual particles were calculated, totalled, and ratioed to derive the conversion factor. The JEM was integrated with individual job histories to calculate average and cumulative exposure for each case and control. Multiple exposure estimates were derived for unprotected exposures as well as for exposures adjusted for estimated respiratory protective equipment use and efficiency.
Results: The mean of the count to respirable mass conversion factors derived from 14 archival particle size samples was 157 µg m-3 per mppcf (SD: 42; range: 96-263) with no statistical difference across process areas (drying, screening, vibrating, binning, bulk loading, bagging), P = 0.29. The JEM demonstrated an industry-wide decrease in prevailing exposures to RQ of up to about 2 orders of magnitude from the distant (1929) to the recent (2012) past. Unadjusted cumulative exposures for cases and controls were statistically different (P < 0.001) with respective medians (range) of 3764 µg m-3 year (221-25121) and 1595 µg m-3 year (0-16446). Adjustment of exposure for use of respiratory protection showed modest reductions in estimated exposure: median adjusted cumulative exposures assuming a protection factor of 5 were 86% and 77% of the unadjusted values for cases and controls, respectively. Conclusions: The industrial sand industry offers a unique setting for examination of silicosis risk because of the high silica content of industrial sand and a long history of radiographic silicosis surveillance of industry workers. However, the great majority of silicosis cases in this industry are found among former workers and are associated with exposures occurring in the distant past, which necessitates extensive retrospective exposure assessment and increases the likelihood of exposure misclassification. Nonetheless, the estimated cumulative exposures for silicosis cases and controls in this work were significantly different, with the median cumulative exposure for cases being more than twice that of their matched controls.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30016388     DOI: 10.1093/annweh/wxy064

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Work Expo Health        ISSN: 2398-7308            Impact factor:   2.179


  4 in total

1.  Biological effects of inhaled hydraulic fracturing sand dust. IX. Summary and significance.

Authors: 
Journal:  Toxicol Appl Pharmacol       Date:  2020-11-07       Impact factor: 4.219

2.  Temporal trends in respirable dust and respirable quartz concentrations within the European industrial minerals sector over a 15-year period (2002-2016).

Authors:  Hicham Zilaout; Remko Houba; Hans Kromhout
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2020-02-07       Impact factor: 4.402

3.  Quartz Dust Exposure Affects NLRP3 Inflammasome Activation and Plasma Levels of IL-18 and IL-1Ra in Iron Foundry Workers.

Authors:  Alexander Hedbrant; Lena Andersson; Ing-Liss Bryngelsson; Daniel Eklund; Håkan Westberg; Eva Särndahl; Alexander Persson
Journal:  Mediators Inflamm       Date:  2020-01-07       Impact factor: 4.711

4.  Some pleural effusions labeled as idiopathic could be produced by the inhalation of silica.

Authors:  Silvia Bielsa; Ana Guitart; Aureli Esquerda; Rodrigo Fernández-Pacheco; Maria Teresa Baranguán; Alfonso Ibarra; José M Porcel
Journal:  Pleura Peritoneum       Date:  2022-01-03
  4 in total

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