A further cohort study of workers employed at a factory
manufacturing chemicals for the rubber industry, with special reference
to the chemicals 2-mercaptobenzothiazole (MBT), aniline,
phenyl-
-naphthylamine and o-toluidine
Tom Sorahana, Linda Hamiltona, John R Jacksonb
a Institute of
Occupational Health, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham
B15 2TT, UK, b 41 High House Lane, Tardebigge, Bromsgrove,
Worcs B60 3AQ, UK
Correspondence to: Dr T Sorahan, Institute of Occupational Health, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK email T.M.Sorahan{at}bham.ac.uk
Accepted 27
September 1999
OBJECTIVES
To
investigate mortality and cancer morbidity in workers from a factory
manufacturing chemicals for the rubber industry.
METHODS
The
mortality (1955-96) and cancer morbidity experience (1971-92) of a
cohort of 2160 male production workers from a chemical factory in north
Wales were investigated. All subjects had at least 6 months employment
at the factory and some employment in the period 1955-84. Detailed job
histories were abstracted from company computerised records and
estimates of individual cumulative exposure to 2-mercaptobenzothiazole
(MBT) and its derivatives were obtained, with a job exposure matrix
derived by a former factory hygienist. Durations of employment in
the aniline, phenyl-
-naphthylamine (PBN) and
o-toluidine departments were also
calculated. Two analytical approaches were used, indirect
standardisation and Poisson regression.
RESULTS
Based
on serial rates for the general population of England and Wales,
observed mortality for the total cohort was close to expectation for
all causes (observed (obs) deaths 1131, expected (exp) deaths 1114.5, standardised mortality ratio (SMR) 101), and for all cancers (obs 305, exp 300.2, SMR 102). There was a significant (p<0.05) excess mortality
from cancer of the bladder in the 605 study subjects potentially
exposed to one or more of the four chemicals being investigated (obs 9, exp 3.25, SMR 277, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 127 to 526). This
excess was dependent primarily on deaths occurring >20 years after
first exposure in those who started employment before 1955 (obs 7, exp 1.25, SMR 560, 95% CI 225 to 1154, p<0.001). There were 30 subjects in the total study cohort who, on the basis of death certificates or
cancer registration particulars, had had malignant bladder cancer. In
separate analyses of the four exposure history variables (after
adjustment for age), Poisson regression showed significant positive
trends for risk of notification of bladder cancer increasing with
cumulative duration of employment in the PBN (p<0.001) and o-toluidine departments (p<0.01); similar
findings were not obtained for cumulative exposure to MBT or for
duration of employment in the aniline department. In a simultaneous
analysis of all four chemical exposure variables, a significant
positive trend remained for duration of employment with exposure to PBN
(p<0.05). Further analyses of all cases of bladder cancer (malignant
and benign diagnoses) used employment histories lagged by 15 years;
similar findings were obtained.
CONCLUSIONS
It
seems likely that some members of this cohort have had occupational
bladder cancer. Confident interpretation is difficult because of
small numbers in the exposed subcohorts, relatively crude measures of
exposure assessment for the four chemicals under study, and presence of
unconsidered potential chemical confounders. The simplest
interpretation of the findings about bladder cancer may be that PBN (or
a chemical reagent or chemical intermediate associated with its
production at this factory in the 1930s and 1940s) is a bladder
carcinogen. Priority should be given, however, to obtaining information
on the cancer experience of other working populations exposed to PBN or
to o-toluidine.
Keywords: 2-mercaptobenzothiazole; phenyl-
-naphthylamine;
o-toluidine;
aniline
© 2000 by Occupational and Environmental Medicine
This article has been cited by other articles:
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[Abstract] -
VEYS;, C A, SORAHAN, T., JACKSON, J. R
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[Full Text]
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