Mortality from lung cancer among silicotic patients in Sardinia: an update study with 10 more years of follow up
P Carta, G Aru, P Manca
Institute of
Occupational Medicine, University of Cagliari, Via S Georgio 12, 09124 Cagliari, Italy
Correspondence to: Professor P Carta cartapl{at}pacs.unica.it
Accepted 12 July 2001
OBJECTIVES
To evaluate
the association between silica, silicosis and lung cancer, the
mortality of 724 patients with silicosis, first diagnosed by standard
chest x ray film between 1964 and 1970, has
been analysed by a cohort study extended to 31 December 1997.
METHODS
Smoking and
detailed occupational histories were available for each member of the
cohort as well as the estimated lifetime exposure to respirable silica
dust and radon daughters. Two independent readers blindly classified
standard radiographs according to the 12 point International Labour
Organisation (ILO) scale. Lung function tests meeting the American
Thoracic Society's criteria were available for 665 patients.
Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) for selected causes of death were
based on the age specific Sardinian regional death rates.
RESULTS
The mortality
for all causes was significantly higher than expected (SMR 1.35, 95%
confidence interval (95% CI) 1.24 to 1.46) mainly due to tuberculosis
(SMR 22.0) and to non-malignant chronic respiratory diseases (NMCRD)
(SMR 6.03). All cancer deaths were within the expected numbers (SMR
0.93; 95% CI 0.76 to 1.14). The SMR for lung cancer was 1.37 (95% CI
0.98 to 1.91, 34 observed), increasing to 1.65 (95% CI 0.98 to 2.77)
allowing for 20 years of latency since the first diagnosis of
silicosis. Although mortality from NMCRD was strongly associated to the
severity of radiological silicosis and to the extent of the cumulative
exposure to silica, SMR for lung cancer was weakly related to the ILO
categories and to the cumulative exposure to silica dust only after 20 years of lag interval. A significant excess of deaths from lung cancer (SMR 2.35) was found among silicotic patients previously employed in
underground metal mines characterised by a relatively high airborne
concentration of radon daughters and among ever smokers who showed an
airflow obstruction at the time of the first diagnosis of silicosis
(SMR 3.29). Mortality for lung cancer related to exposure was evaluated
with both the Cox's proportional hazards modelling within the entire
cohort and a nested case-control study (34 cases of lung cancer and 136 matched controls). Both multivariate analyses did not show any
significant association with cumulative exposure to silica or severity
of silicosis, but confirmed the association between mortality for lung
cancer and relatively high exposure to radon, smoking, and airflow
obstruction as significant covariates.
CONCLUSIONS
The
findings indicate that the slightly increased mortality for lung cancer
in this cohort of silicotic patients was significantly associated with
other risk factors
such as cigarette smoking, airflow obstruction, and
estimated exposure to radon daughters in underground mines
rather than
to the severity of radiological silicosis or to the cumulative exposure
to crystalline silica dust itself.
Keywords: silicosis; crystalline silica; lung cancer mortality
© 2001 by Occupational and Environmental Medicine
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