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Occup Environ Med 1995;52:773-774 doi:10.1136/oem.52.11.773
  • Research Article

Diabetes mellitus and arsenic exposure: a second look at case-control data from a Swedish copper smelter.

  1. M Rahman,
  2. O Axelson
  1. Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, University Hospital, Linköping, Sweden.

      Abstract

      OBJECTIVES--To find out whether a newly found association between diabetes mellitus and arsenic in drinking water in Taiwan could be reproduced in copper smelters with arsenic exposure. METHODS--Extended analysis of a previous case-control study from 1978 was based on death records and objective exposure information from the company. The final analysis included only those employed at the smelter. Cases were 12 people with diabetes mellitus on the death certificate and those for whom there was clinical information on this disease. Controls were 31 people without cancer, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease as these disease categories had been associated with arsenic exposure in the original study and elsewhere. RESULTS--The odds ratios found for diabetes mellitus with increasing arsenic exposure categories were (reference level = 1), 2.0, 4.2, and 7.0, but the 95% confidence intervals included unity. Unstratified test for trend was weakly significant, P = 0.03. CONCLUSIONS--Although based on small numbers, the findings provide some support for the suggestion that arsenic exposure could sometimes play a part in the development of diabetes mellitus.

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