Article Text
Abstract
OBJECTIVES To examine if the occurrence of different cancers was increased among rubber workers, as the highest known exposures of humans to nitrosamines have occurred in the rubber industry.
METHODS A cohort of 8933 rubber workers (hired after 1 January 1950, still active or retired on 1 January 1981 and employed for at least 1 year in one of five study factories) was followed up for mortality from 1 January 1981 to 31 December 1991. Work histories were reconstructed with routinely documented cost centre codes, which allowed identification by employment in specific work areas. For each cost centre code time and factory specific, semi-quantitative exposures to nitrosamines (three levels: low, medium, high) and other compounds were estimated by industrial hygienists. Rate ratios for medium (RRm) and high (RRh) exposures and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) were calculated with Cox's proportional hazards models with the low exposure as reference.
RESULTS Exposure to nitrosamines was significantly associated with an increased mortality from cancers of the oesophagus (13 deaths: RRm 1.7, 95% CI 0.3 to 10.3; RRh 7.3, 95% CI 1.9 to 27.8) and of the oral cavity and pharynx (17 deaths: RRm 0.8, 95% CI 0.2 to 4.1; RRh 3.9, 95% CI 1.4 to 11.1). A non-significant trend of increasing mortality with exposure to higher concentrations of nitrosamines was found for mortality from cancer of the prostate (26 deaths: RRm 1.4, 95% CI 0.5 to 3.8; RRh 2.2, 95% CI 0.9 to 5.6), and the brain (six deaths: RRm 3.9, 95% CI 0.3 to 42.6; RRh 6.0, 95% CI 0.6 to 57.6). No association was found between exposure to nitrosamines and cancer of the stomach (RRm 0.8, 95% CI 0.4 to 1.8; RRh1.2, 95% CI 0.5 to 2.5) or lung (RRm 1.0, 95% CI 0.6 to 1.5; RRh 1.0, 95% CI 0.7 to 1.6).
CONCLUSIONS Exposure to high concentrations of nitrosamines is associated with increased mortality from cancers of the oesophagus, oral cavity, and pharynx, but not with increased mortality from cancers of the stomach or lung.
- nitrosamines
- cancer mortality
- rubber industry
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In 1956 Magee and Barnes1 showed the carcinogenic potential of nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) in rats. Since then about 90% of the 300 tested nitrosamines have shown potent carcinogenic effects in experimental studies2 in at least 39 different species3 and many different organs.4Predominant sites of tumour induction in animals include oral cavity, oesophagus, stomach, urinary bladder, and brain.2 5Dose-response studies in animals have indicated “no effect levels” for specific nitrosamines—such as NDMA and nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA)—which correspond to dietary concentrations as low as 1 ppm.6 7 No animal species has been found to be resistant and experimental data provide little evidence that humans are resistant to the carcinogenic effect of nitrosamines.5
Nitrosamines are ubiquitous in the human environment and have been detected in food items, including cured meat, bacon, fish, and beer, in cosmetics, drugs, and in the front passenger areas of new cars.8-12 High non-occupational exposures of humans result from the consumption of smokeless or burned tobacco.5 10 11 13
Evidence directly linking exposure to nitrosamines and cancer in humans, however, has been difficult to establish because exposures in the human environment often occurred to low concentrations of nitrosamines and complex mixtures. Therefore only two specific N-nitroso compounds, NDMA and NDEA, have been classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) as “probably carcinogenic to humans”.14
The highest concentrations of nitrosamines in the human environment have been measured in the rubber industry.15-17 However, exposure conditions in this industry are complex and despite a long history of epidemiological investigations of carcinogenic risks in this industry18 19 no previous study has specifically investigated exposure to nitrosamines.
We have conducted a large historic cohort study in the German rubber industry.20-22 This is the first report on cancer risks associated with occupational exposure in the rubber industry focusing particularly on nitrosamines.
Methods
The cohort definition and follow up have previously been described20 and are only briefly summarised here. The originally defined cohort included all male German blue collar workers who were employed for at least 1 year in any one of five study factories and who were alive and actively employed or retired on 1 January 1981 (n=11 663). This originally defined cohort was then restricted to all workers who were hired on or after 1 January 1950 (n=8933) to focus on potential risks of working conditions in the more recent rubber industry and to reduce the potential for a healthy worker survivor effect. Furthermore, due to uncertainties about changes of production processes and factory structures during and after the second world war, it was necessary to limit exposure assessment to the time from 1950 onwards. Follow up of individual cohort members started on 1 January 1981 but not before completion of 1 year of employment, and ended at death, or the end of the follow up period, 31 December 1991. Follow up of individual cohort members ended also at the age of 85 years, because the reported causes of death on the death certificate of very old people may be less valid and the specific causes less likely to be related to occupation. Health insurance data and personnel files of the participating factories as well as German population registries were used to determine the vital status of cohort members at the end of the observation period. In the case of deceased cohort members, death certificates were requested from community health departments. The underlying causes of death as reported on death certificates were coded by professional nosologists from the State Institute of Statistics of North-Rhine-Westphalia according to the ninth revision of the International classification of diseases, injuries, and deaths (ICD-9).23
Individual work histories within the rubber companies were reconstructed with routinely documented cost centre codes (Kostenstellen).21 These were originally generated for accounting purposes, but allow identification of employment in specific work areas in the respective periods. As environmental monitoring of nitrosamines was not performed before 1979, retrospective semiquantitative estimates of exposure were necessary. Together with industrial hygienists from the rubber factories involved and external experts a scheme for categorising exposure was developed (table1).16 24 25
The categorisation scheme and the exposure assessment for nitrosamines was based on evidence from a hazard survey in the early 1980s that included several of the factories involved in this epidemiological study. The highest nitrosamine concentrations were detected in curing and vulcanisation: 1060 μg/m3 of NDMA and 4700 μg/m3 of N-nitrosomorpholin.16 Comprehensive nitrosamine measurements in all factories were performed soon after that survey. Information on changes of production processes and introduction of improved technical safety equipment within different tasks was used to estimate exposure back through time.
Most of the nitrosamines detected in the air of rubber factories are formed during vulcanisation. N-nitrosodiphenylamine (NDPhA), which was used as a retarder until early 1980,26 has shown only limited carcinogenic effects in animals.27 However, it was found to serve as a potent transnitrosating agent28thereby increasing exposure to total nitrosamines by an order of magnitude.16 Also, salt bath curing resulted in some of the highest concentrations of nitrosamines,6 16 29except when peroxide accelerators were used instead of amine derivatives.16 Medium concentrations of nitrosamines were detected in vulcanisation and subsequent production steps in production lines where neither NDPhA nor salt bath curing with peroxides was used. In production processes before vulcanisation—such as raw material handling, weighing and mixing, extruding and calendering, and component building—in general, only relatively low nitrosamine concentrations were detected. We assessed exposure to total nitrosamines because animal studies indicated linear additive carcinogenicity for exposure to low concentrations of different nitrosamines,30 and because assessment of exposure to specific nitrosamines would not have been possible. On the basis of our categorisation scheme, industrial hygienists of the factories estimated calendar time and factory specific exposure—that is, airborne concentrations, for each cost centre code, independently of individual cohort members. This information was then linked on the basis of cost centre codes with the occupational histories of cohort members within the rubber industry. The retrospective exposure assessment was based on judgements of the industrial hygienists. The following cut off points served to classify exposure to nitrosamines: for the high exposure category nitrosamine concentrations were assumed to be >15 μg/m3. The current technical limit value of 2.5 μg/m3 for nitrosamine exposure for specific operations in the German rubber industry31 served as upper boundary for the low exposure category.
DATA ANALYSIS
For exposure specific analyses cohort members were classified into initially determined exposure categories. Within exposure category 1, high exposure for each variable included workers who had been employed for at least 1 year in cost centre codes with high exposures, and low exposure included workers who had been employed for <1 year at medium or high exposures. Otherwise workers were included in the medium exposure category. Within exposure category 2 (the more extreme category) the cut off points were 10 years for high exposure and 0.5 years for low, respectively. Exposure was treated as time dependent variable—that is, risk sets were formed whenever a death from a cancer of interest occurred in the cohort—and an exposure category was assigned to the index case and the corresponding risk set according to the current exposure status. Exposure was further lagged by 10 years to account for latency. Lagging was performed so that a worker's current person-years at risk was assigned to the exposure concentration reached 10 years earlier.32
Hazard rate ratios (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) for exposure to nitrosamines were calculated with low exposure as the reference. The SAS procedure PROC PHREG. 6.12 was used to calculate time dependent and age (time marker) adjusted RRs. Trend tests were performed with exposure scores (low=0, medium=1, high=2) as covariates in the proportional hazards model. All analyses were restricted to cohort members with complete time dependent exposure information in the respective model.33
Results
The distribution of cohort members by age group and employment is given in table 2. At the beginning of follow up, overall 6875 cohort members were actively employed in the rubber industry and 2058 were retired. At the end of follow up vital status was unknown for 31 of 8933 cohort members (0.3%) and cause of death was unknown for 42 of 1521 deceased cohort members (2.8%). Complete occupational histories on the basis of cost centre codes as well as calendar time and factory specific exposure assessment for these cost centre codes was available for 94.8% of the cohort members (table 3). Distribution of workers by exposure to nitrosamines by date of hire and by the two exposure categories is shown in table 3. With exposure category 1, about 25% of the cohort members were exposed to high and 25% to medium nitrosamine concentrations. With exposure category 2, about 20% of the cohort members were assigned to high and 40% to medium nitrosamine concentrations. With both exposure categories there was a trend of decreasing nitrosamine exposure by date of hire.
Mortality from all causes and all cancers increased slightly with exposure to higher concentrations of nitrosamines (table 4). Tests for trend and associations with exposure to high concentrations of nitrosamines were significant for cancer of the oesophagus, and cancers of the lip, oral cavity, and pharynx. The comparison of results between exposure categories 1 and 2 show that the observed risks were higher when exposure category 2 was used. The results for the subgroups of cancer of the oral cavity versus cancer of the pharynx show slightly higher risks for cancer of the pharynx. However, overall the effect estimates for the two subgroups did not differ substantially and any difference may be due to chance. One death from pharyngeal cancer was excluded from analyses, because we had no information on cost centre code and potential exposures for the first 14 months of employment in the rubber industry in the early 1960s. According to the exposure assessment, he was not exposed to nitrosamines during his subsequent employment in the rubber industry.
We also found an exposure-response relation, although not significant, and similar for both exposure categories between exposure to nitrosamines and mortality from prostate cancer. For two cases of prostate cancer exposure information was missing for the first work period of 7 and 9 years in the late 1950s. Both workers were exposed to low concentrations of nitrosamines in subsequent jobs in the rubber industry. For brain cancer a non-significant exposure-response relation was found, which was more pronounced for exposure category 1. However, the findings for brain cancer were based on only six cases.
Exposure to nitrosamines was not associated with mortality from lung and stomach cancer and these effect estimates did not change substantially after adjustment for exposure to asbestos, talc, and carbon black. For seven cases (4.5%) of lung cancer no exposure information was available for their first employment period, which was mostly in the late 1950s and early 1960s and lasted 2–21 years. Subsequently these workers were not exposed to nitrosamines; however, two of the seven were exposed to asbestos, talc, and carbon black.
Discussion
The highest documented exposures of humans to nitrosamines have occurred in the rubber industry. On the basis of our earlier analyses by work area among this cohort of rubber workers22 we had speculated that nitrosamines may have played a part in the excess risk of cancers of the pharynx, oesophagus, and urinary bladder. This is the first study to investigate occupational exposure to nitrosamines and cancer risks among workers in the rubber industry.
This cohort was restricted to workers who were alive and active or retired on 1 January 1981. This may have led to a cohort of survivors and may thus have resulted in underestimation of the true risk associated with exposure to nitrosamines. By contrast, if more heavily exposed workers or those ill with cancer stayed, and less exposed or mostly the healthy workers moved on, this cohort definition may have resulted in overestimation of the true risk. However, the restriction of the cohort to workers who were employed after 1 January 1950 resulted in a more homogenous cohort and reduced the potential for a healthy worker survivor effect. Furthermore, the small excess risks found for all cause and all cancer mortality may, at least in part, be explained by excess mortality from diseases associated with exposure to nitrosamines. Therefore, these results argue against a strong healthy worker survivor effect as well as against a substantial overestimation of risks.
The assessment of exposure to nitrosamines was carried out by industrial hygienists who were familiar with the factories. This assessment was based on retrospective estimates of exposure for all cost centre codes according to the categorisation scheme, independently of individual workers. Nevertheless, it is likely that some misclassification of exposure occurred. Outcomes of the study were assessed on the basis of death certificates which were coded by professional nosologists. Therefore the potential misclassification would be an independent and non-differential misclassification process of exposure and the observed effect estimates would be biased toward the null value.34 35 Due to random variation, the empirical misclassification then probably results in underestimation of the association.36 37 Therefore, with positive findings, preoccupation with non-differential misclassification is rarely warranted.38 However, as we investigated the association between nitrosamine exposure and several cancer sites we cannot be sure that the associations found were not due to chance.
Our results show significant excess risks of lip, oral, and pharyngeal cancers among workers who were exposed to high concentrations of nitrosamines. Increased risks of mortality from oral and pharyngeal cancer among rubber workers also have been reported from occupational surveillance data in Great Britain,39 and from cohort40-43 and case-control studies44; only two cohort studies found no increased risk.45 46 However, none of these studies provided risk estimates for exposure to nitrosamines.
In non-occupational studies, frequent consumption of foods containing nitrosamines, especially NDMA, has been related to an increased risk of oral cancer in a case-control study.47 Furthermore, several reviews concluded that exposure to high concentrations of tobacco specific nitrosamines among snuff dippers48 49 is associated with oral cancer49-51 and an increased risk of nasopharyngeal carcinoma has been related to the consumption of Cantonese style salted fish,52 where high concentrations of NDMA have been identified as major carcinogens.9 53
In experimental animal studies induction of oral and pharyngeal cancer has been found by administration of non-tobacco specific nitrosamines.14 Furthermore, it has been shown in non-human primates that systemic administration of low doses of NDMA may result in DNA adducts in the oral mucosa.54
The observed exposure-response relation and the strong association between high exposure to nitrosamines and mortality from oesophageal cancer support a causal role of nitrosamine exposure and oesophageal cancer. Significant excess risks of oesophageal cancer have also been found in the British rubber industry42 43 and among vulcanisation workers potentially exposed to high concentrations of nitrosamines.55 Other studies among rubber workers, however, provided only limited evidence of an excess mortality from oesophageal cancer.22 56
Substantial occupational exposure to nitrosamines, especially NDELA, may also have occurred among workers exposed to synthetic metal working fluids.57-59 DNA strand breaks were related to exposure to NDELA among those workers,60 and in a large cohort study of workers exposed to metal working fluids, significant excess risks for oesophageal cancer were found among workers exposed to nitrosamines.61
Further support for an association between exposure to nitrosamines and oesophageal cancer is derived from studies of dietary intake of nitrosamine contaminated food among populations at high risk of oesophageal cancer in China62 63 and a population based case-control study in the United States.47
In several animal species it has been shown that the oesophagus is one of the most common sites for tumour induction by nitrosamines.64 65 Systemic application of low doses of NDMA resulted in O6 methylguanine DNA adducts in oesophageal tissue of non-human primates,54 and nitrosamine metabolism has been shown to be similar in rat and human oesophagus.66-68Higher concentrations of O6 methylguanine were extracted from DNA of patients with oesophageal cancer from a high risk area in China compared with those from European patients.69 70Furthermore, it has been shown that cytochromesP-450 3A4, and 2E1 are involved in activation of NDMA in human oesophageal tissue,71 and that nitrosamines can induce cancer in human oesophageal epithelium.62
Environmental causes for prostatic cancer remain largely unknown72 and our results of a non-significant, moderate exposure-response relation between exposure to nitrosamines and mortality from prostatic cancer may offer a new hypothesis. The prostate is not a typical target organ of nitrosamine induced cancer in laboratory studies. However, two research groups have established rat models for induction of prostatic cancer by systemic application of specific nitrosamines.73-76 Among rubber workers excess risks of prostatic cancer have been reported repeatedly among workers in maintenance and general service.22 77-79 In all of these jobs workers may have been exposed to nitrosamines through metal working fluids, and exposure to metal working fluids has been related to prostatic cancer among a cohort of automobile workers.80 However, in this study an association was found especially for straight oil metal working fluids, and not for synthetic oil metal working fluids, which had been most heavily contaminated by nitrosamines.
Since the first epidemiological evidence of an increased risk of brain tumours among rubber workers in 194981 several cohort,41 46 78 82-88 and case-control studies89-91 have reported excess risks of brain tumours. However, other studies among rubber workers42 92-95failed to support these findings. Nitrosamides are considered to be some of the most potent experimental carcinogens to induce brain tumours and therefore a role for nitrosamines, which, unlike nitrosamides, require metabolic activation,64 has been hypothesised.96 Moreover, in vivo activation of NDMA and formation of DNA adducts in brain tissue of primates has been shown recently.54 Our results are the first to describe an association between exposure to high concentrations of nitrosamines and brain cancer.
It is unlikely that these findings are confounded by other known risk factors, such as ionising radiation, serious head injuries, or other occupational exposures. However, the lack of precision of our effect estimates is a serious limitation.
In experimental animal studies tumour induction by nitrosamines has been shown in several additional organs, preferentially stomach, colon, liver, pancreas, and lung.14 64 However, with the exception of stomach cancer, the epidemiological evidence for these other cancer sites is weak.5 9 97-100 Our results do not support an association between exposure to nitrosamines and mortality from stomach or lung cancer. We have discussed previously that the increased risk of stomach cancer among rubber workers was mostly found in work areas with relatively low exposure to nitrosamines.22 101 In a large ecological study there was an association of nitrosoproline excretion with oesophageal cancer, but not with stomach cancer.102 Furthermore, it has been shown that compared with oesophageal mucosa the stomach of the rat poorly activates nitrosamines.68 An association of lung cancer with dietary intake of nitrosamines was found in a case-control study in Uruguay,103 but not with exposure to nitrosamines among workers exposed to metal working fluids.104
Asbestos has been discussed as a potential occupational risk factor for oral, pharyngeal,105 106 and oesophageal107cancers and exposure to asbestos may have occurred in the rubber industry. However overall evidence is weak, and in our cohort none of the cases of oral, pharyngeal, or oesophageal cancer exposed to high concentrations of nitrosamines had been exposed to high concentrations of asbestos.
Sporadic reports suggested an association between exposure to high concentrations of polycylic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and cancers of the oesophagus,108 109 oral cavity, and pharynx.109 110 Exposure to PAHs may have occurred in the rubber industry through aromatic oils or carbon black.111However, exposure to PAHs in our cohort members was low compared with other industries, and conventional carcinogenic PAHs are not sufficiently volatile to be released into the air in notable quantities during rubber processing.17
Tobacco smoking and alcohol drinking are strong risk factors for upper aero-digestive cancers.112-117 Currently, we have no data to assess potential confounding by these individual risk factors in our study. However, our results are based on internal comparisons and we have no indication that the prevalence of smoking or alcohol drinking was related to job assignment or exposure to nitrosamines. Furthermore, other smoking related cancers—for example, lung cancer—alcohol related causes of death—for example, alcohol-associated liver cirrhosis or injury and poisoning (data not shown)—and diseases associated with smoking and alcohol—for example, laryngeal cancer—were inversely associated or not associated with exposure to nitrosamines.
It has been hypothesised that the carcinogenic effect of alcohol may be mediated by increased exposure of internal organs to nitrosamines.54 In animal experiments co-exposure to ethanol reduced blood clearance and increased urinary excretion of NDMA in primates,118 increased nitrosamine derived alkylation of oesophageal DNA in rats119 and primates,54and increased induction of oesophageal tumours by nitrosamines in rats.120 121
Conclusions
Overall, the pattern of excess cancer mortality associated with exposure to nitrosamines is compatible with data from animal experiments. Our results and other recently published epidemiological studies support an association between exposure to nitrosamines and cancers of the oesophagus, oral cavity, and pharynx. It is unlikely that confounding by smoking and alcohol can explain entirely our findings. Interpretation of the effect estimates found for nitrosamine exposure and brain cancer is hampered by non-significant results on the basis of a small number of deaths. The prostate is not a typical target organ for nitrosamine induced carcinogenicity. However, some animal data support our findings, which may offer a new aetiological hypothesis for prostate cancer. Finally, our results do not support an association between exposure to high concentrations of nitrosamines and mortality from lung or stomach cancer.
Acknowledgments
We thank the participating companies, especially the industrial hygienists and occupational health physicians. Without their help this study would not have been possible. We are particularly grateful to Bertold Spiegelhalder, Hans Kromhout, Roel Vermeulen, and Klaus Norpoth for their scientific advice on retrospective exposure assessment in the rubber industry. Finally we acknowledge the important contributions to this study from field workers, programmers, and secretaries. The study was funded and supported by the Berufsgenossenschaft der Chemischen Industrie, Heidelberg.