Literature DB >> 8217852

Mortality from lung cancer in Ontario uranium miners.

R A Kusiak1, A C Ritchie, J Muller, J Springer.   

Abstract

Mortality from lung cancer was greater in Ontario uranium miners than in the general male population of Ontario (observed = 152, expected = 67.6, standardised mortality ratio 225, 95% confidence interval 191-264). Part of the excess of lung cancer may be because the proportion of men who are smokers or have smoked is greater in uranium miners than in Ontario men. Smoking does not explain the whole excess. Mortality from lung cancer in Ontario uranium miners is clearly related to exposure to short lived radon progeny. The excess relative risk of lung cancer from the same degree of exposure to short lived radon progeny is greatest five to 14 years after exposure and less subsequently. It is greater in men under the age of 55 years and less in older men. Part of the excess of lung cancer mortality in Ontario uranium miners is probably also due to exposure to arsenic that occurred earlier in gold mines. In Ontario uranium miners, the lung cancer mortality from exposure to arsenic increases as the intensity of exposure to short lived radon progeny increases. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that the risk of lung cancer from exposure to arsenic is enhanced by exposure to other carcinogens. In Ontario uranium miners, the proportion of lung cancers that are small cell carcinomas is greater than in the general population. The proportion of small cell carcinomas is especially great five to 14 years after exposure to short lived radon progeny and in men who die from lung cancer at younger ages.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8217852      PMCID: PMC1035522          DOI: 10.1136/oem.50.10.920

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Ind Med        ISSN: 0007-1072


  7 in total

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2.  Carcinoma of the lung in Ontario gold miners: possible aetiological factors.

Authors:  R A Kusiak; J Springer; A C Ritchie; J Muller
Journal:  Br J Ind Med       Date:  1991-12

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  7 in total
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8.  Occupational radon exposure and lung cancer mortality: estimating intervention effects using the parametric g-formula.

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10.  Lung cancer in a U.S. population with low to moderate arsenic exposure.

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