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A Case-Control Study on Occupational Lung Cancer Risks in an Industrialized City of Japan
Authors:Naohito Yamaguchi  Masamitsu Kido  Tsutomu Hoshuyama  Hideo Manabe  Yutaka Kikuchi  Tetsuo Nishio  Li Hwa K. Ohshima  Shaw Watanabe
Affiliation:Division of Epidemiology, National Cancer Center Research Institute, 5-1-1 Tsukiji, Ckuo-ku, Tokyo 104;institute of Industrial Ecological Sciences, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, 1-1 Iseigaoka, Yahatanishi-ku, Kitakyushu 807;Kyushu Koseinenkin Hospital, 2-1-1 Kishinoura, Yahatanishi-ku, Kitakyushu 806;Kitakyushu Medical Center, 2-1-1 Bashaku, Kokurakita-ku, Kitakyushu 802
Abstract:A hospital-based case-control study was conducted to evaluate occupational risks of lung cancer in an industrialized city of Japan. The lung cancer cases were obtained from 3 major hospitals in the city. The control group consisted of patients with a variety of diseases hospitalized in the same wards of the same hospitals as the cases. After matching on sex, 5–year age category and hospital, 144 cases and 676 controls comprised the study group. A self-administered questionnaire was used to obtain lifetime job histories and smoking status. The conditional logistic regression model was used to estimate relative risks after controlling for smoking and employment in other jobs. The workers in shipbuilding, ironworks and other plants (mostly chemical plants) showed statistically significant increases in lung cancer risk with relative risks of 6.18, 2.02, and 2.66, respectively. An increase in risk with the duration of employment was also observed in the "other plants" category. Building and road construction workers also showed increased relative risks, 1.95 and 1.79, but they were not significant. When the risk was evaluated on the exposure chemicals, the workers exposed to inorganic acids and bases had significantly increased risk. The workers exposed to asbestos, dust or organic chemicals also showed increased risk but the effects were not significant. The combined effect of smoking and employment in ironworks showed a good fit to an additive model, while that in the "other plants" category was closer to a multiplicative model.
Keywords:Key words    Lung cancer    Epidemiology    Occupation    Chemical exposure
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