Article Text
Abstract
Aims: To examine mortality from different causes and cancer incidence among a cohort of benzene workers in England and Wales.
Methods: A cohort of 5514 workers who had been occupationally exposed to benzene in 1966/67 or earlier was assembled by the former Factory Inspectorate and the Medical Research Council from details provided by 233 employers in England and Wales. The cohort was followed up for mortality (1968–2002) and cancer registrations (1971–2001). National mortality rates and cancer registration (incidence) rates were used to calculate standardised mortality ratios and standardised registration ratios.
Results: Mortality was close to expectation for all causes and significantly increased for cancer of the lip, cancer of the lung and bronchus, secondary and unspecified cancers, acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia (ANLL), and all neoplasms. Significant deficits were shown for three non-malignant categories (mental disorders, diseases of the digestive system, accidents). SMRs for other leukaemia, lymphomas, and multiple myeloma were close to or below expectation. There was some evidence of under-ascertainment of cancer registrations, although significantly increased SRRs were shown for lung cancer and cancer of the pleura (mesothelioma).
Conclusions: Many study subjects would have been exposed to carcinogens other than benzene (for example, asbestos, rubber industry fumes, foundry fumes, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), and the excesses of lung cancer and mesothelioma are likely to reflect exposures to these other carcinogens. The carcinogenic effects of benzene exposure on the lymphohaematopoietic system were limited to ANLL.
- AML, acute myeloid leukaemia
- ANLL, acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia
- CML, chronic myeloid leukaemia
- SRR, standardised cancer registration ratio
- Benzene
- cohort study
- leukaemia
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- AML, acute myeloid leukaemia
- ANLL, acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia
- CML, chronic myeloid leukaemia
- SRR, standardised cancer registration ratio
Benzene exposure is known to increase the risk of acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia (ANLL),1–4 though certain studies have suggested that other haematopoietic malignancies may also be increased.5,6,7,8,9,10,11 We have examined mortality from different causes and also the incidence of different malignancies in an historical cohort of workers exposed occupationally to benzene in England and Wales. ANLL rather than acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) was selected as the primary health outcome of interest following exposure to benzene “to embrace the other specified acute leukaemias that are variably diagnosed in different centres and to avoid exclusion of the rag-bag of acute unspecified leukaemias, the majority of which are likely to be AML or some allied type of disease”.12
METHODS
In 1966/67, at the request of the Medical Research Council, Drs R Whitelaw and T Lloyd-Davies of the (then) Inspectorate of Factories collected, through its regional offices, details from employers of 5514 individuals (5130 men, 384 women) who had been exposed at work to benzene in the recent past in England and Wales.
A total of 233 firms or plants provided details of their benzene exposed workers through their personnel officers. These details included names, date of birth, dates of starting and ending benzene exposed work, and the National Insurance Number. Factory Inspectorate personnel attempted to obtain a single estimate for each facility of the average concentration of benzene in the ambient air to which employees were or had been exposed, but survey correspondence shows that this refers to the time of data collection (1966/67) rather than to earlier years of exposure. Such estimates were available from only 130 of the 233 participating facilities.
The original group of researchers included Professor WM Court Brown and RD, both with the MRC in 1966. Initial unpublished analyses involved a comparison of the study nominal roll with a leukaemia death registry. As the study was one of current or recent employees with very little time having elapsed for any adverse health outcomes to have presented themselves, it was decided to carry out a more informative statistical analysis at a later date. In the early 1980s, all survey materials were passed to LJK who arranged for the study members to be “flagged” with the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Details of subjects untraced by ONS were sent to the Department of Health and Social Security (DHSS) for tracing using National Insurance numbers. In these ways, details of subsequent deaths, cancer registrations, and embarkations were obtained. All study materials were transferred recently to the University of Birmingham and study subjects were followed up for mortality and cancer registrations to the end of 2002 and 2001, respectively.
Vital status as recorded in the study computer file was double checked with corresponding computerised data held by the ONS and a few inconsistencies were rectified. On the closing date of the study (31 December 2002), 2543 (46.1%) study subjects were traced alive, 2656 (48.2%) were deceased, 138 (2.5%) had emigrated, and 177 (3.2%) were untraced. Failure to trace subjects was largely a consequence of some factories supplying identifying particulars with initials rather than with full forenames. Of the 670 deaths with cancer as underlying cause in the period 1975–2000, there were 102 for which no cancer registration had been received. A review of these cases by ONS produced registration details for a further 80 subjects. A corresponding search was not attempted for any of the remaining study subjects.
Main messages
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A large historical cohort of benzene exposed workers indicates that exposure to benzene does not affect risks for lymphohaematopoietic malignancies other than acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia (ANLL).
It was clear from their names, that the companies belonged to many sections of industry, including iron and steel foundries, rubber factories, chemical manufacturers, coking plants, boot and shoe manufacturers, printing plants, electricity generation and transmission facilities, and light engineering companies. For the purpose of this analysis, firms were classified under one of 12 headings using a combination of general knowledge, self-explanatory company names, and a review of contemporaneous Kelly’s town directories. All but four factories (with 13 study subjects) could be classified (see table 1). The numbers of plants that, in 1966/67, had estimated benzene exposures ⩾25 ppm are also shown in table 1; these exposure estimates have not been used in the analyses that follow.
Expected numbers of deaths were calculated by applying serial mortality rates for England and Wales, specified by age, sex, and calendar year, to the corresponding person-years-at-risk (p-y) from 1 January 1968 to the closing date of the study (31 December 2002), date of death, date of emigration, or date last known alive, whichever was earliest. Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) were calculated as the ratio of observed deaths to expected deaths, expressed as a percentage; significance tests were two tailed. The analysis was censored at age 85 years since the age distribution within the “open ended” age group ⩾85 years in the cohort might differ appreciably from that of the general population; also, any subjects incorrectly classified as alive at the end of the study would have a disproportionate effect on the expected numbers for the open ended age group. Expected numbers of cancer registrations (cancer incidence data) were calculated similarly for the period 1971–2001.
RESULTS
Table 2 shows observed and expected numbers of cause specific deaths. Among major causes, the only significant excess was for all malignancies with an SMR of 109 (p < 0.05) based on 761 deaths. Overall mortality was close to expectation (SMR 101, based on 2430 deaths). However, significantly reduced SMRs were found for mental disorders (50 based on 8 deaths; p < 0.05), digestive disorders (76 based on 51 deaths; p < 0.05), and accidents (55 based on 23 deaths; p < 0.05). Among specific cancers, significantly increased excesses were found for lung cancer (121 based on 294 deaths; p < 0.01), lip cancer (974 based on 2 deaths; p < 0.05), and cancers of uncertain origin (140 based on 68 deaths; p < 0.001). No significant increase of deaths from leukaemia was observed (137 based on 22 deaths).
Details of deaths from different leukaemia sub-types are shown in table 3 and include a significantly increased SMR for acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia (ANLL) (183 based on 14 deaths; p < 0.05). These 14 deaths comprised 12 deaths from AML and two acute leukaemias (unspecified cell type). Mortality from lymphoid leukaemia and chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) were unexceptional.
Observed and expected numbers of deaths from all causes, all cancers, ANLL, and all other leukaemias are shown by period of death in table 4. The increased mortality shown for ANLL is not limited to earlier periods of follow up. There are no significant trends of SMRs increasing or decreasing with year of death for any of the four sets of findings.
Observed and expected numbers of deaths from lung cancer and from ANLL are shown by industry sector in table 5. Neither set of SMRs is significantly heterogeneous; industry specific findings for ANLL are based on small numbers of deaths. Analyses of deaths from ANLL were also carried out by period of first exposure and by interval from first exposure, and for those leavers with a known date of ceasing exposure, by period of ending exposure and by interval from ending exposure (not shown in table). No clear trends were shown, but the numbers of deaths available for analysis were small.
Table 6 shows standardised cancer registration ratios (SRR) by site. Significant increases are shown for lung cancer (119 based on 293 cases) and pleural cancer (237 based on 15 cases). Deficits are shown for Hodgkin’s disease (45) and multiple myeloma (68) based on 2 and 8 cases, respectively. Incidence of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (100 based on 24 cases) and leukaemia (120 based on 25 cases) was unremarkable. The SRR for ANLL was 165 (based on 12 cases). All 15 employees diagnosed with pleural cancer had died but only six of them had pleural cancer as the underlying cause of death. Of the remaining nine deaths, three deaths from “mesothelioma of the lung” were coded to lung cancer, five from “malignant mesothelioma” (not further specified) were coded to unspecified cancer, and there was a single suicide. SRRs for pleural cancer were also calculated by industry sector (not shown in table). There was no significant heterogeneity in the set of SRRs, but a significant excess was found for employees engaged in the manufacture of chemicals and dyes (SRR 536, based on 9 cases; p < 0.001).
DISCUSSION
The factories that participated in the study provided details only for their benzene exposed employees. By definition they were all exposed in or before 1966–7; 46.5% of the employees were working with benzene in the 1950s and 11.0% in the 1940s. There was evidence of increased mortality for lung and lip cancers and for ANLL, and increased morbidity for lung and pleural cancers. There is no reason to suspect that benzene is responsible for the increased lung and pleural cancer risks in this study. Benzene was not the only carcinogen to which the subjects were exposed in the course of their work. Asbestos is known to have been used in some of the factories studied, and the previously established increased lung cancer risks in coking plants, the rubber industry, and iron and steel foundries are believed to be due to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, rubber fume, and foundry fume, respectively.13–18 The excess mortality for lip cancer was based on two deaths and may well be a chance finding. The increased risk of leukaemia, limited to ANLL, appears to have been small in absolute terms and is attributed to benzene exposure, although it is not possible to exclude some role for other unrecognised leukaemogens.
It seems highly likely that some cancer registrations have been missed, given that the ancillary search carried out by ONS of cancer deaths without cancer registrations produced only an additional 80 cancer registrations. If a similar proportion of under-ascertainment is assumed for other registrations, then some 60 registrations remain untraced. Additional checks on the completeness of cancer registrations for other UK cohort studies might usefully be carried out as a routine. It is also evident that some certifying doctors were probably unaware of how their statements on deaths that were almost certainly pleural mesothelioma would be interpreted by ONS staff for the purpose of national mortality statistics.
The cohort studied is large, all subjects were known to have been exposed to benzene, and a long period of follow up is now available. The cohort, however, is atypical in that it is a “census” cohort with a large number of participating companies, and these factors might make comparisons with other studies more difficult to interpret. The study is also limited by the small numbers of leukaemia deaths available in the analyses of industry sectors and the unknown degree of variability in the exposure profiles of subjects from different plants within each sector. Estimates of earlier benzene exposure for individual study subjects were not available and even estimates for 1966/67 were not provided in a standardised manner. Some estimates referred to peak exposures, though most probably referred to average ambient levels when benzene was being used or manufactured. Some employees would, however, have been exposed to benzene throughout the working day, others might only be exposed for a few hours each week; such information was not available to the study. It was also clear from the study correspondence that, at least in some factories, exposures were known to be much higher in earlier time periods than in 1966/67. Assessment of the available exposure data was also hampered by the absence of recorded job titles. It seems likely, however, that in terms of the available benzene literature, this study encompasses a wide range of exposures, including some of the UK workers most heavily exposed to benzene from the 1940s onwards. Study interpretation would also have been assisted if workers employed at the same facilities but without exposure to benzene had been enrolled into the survey. Nevertheless, this study does not support claims that exposure to benzene affects risks for lymphohaematopoietic malignancies other than ANLL.
Acknowledgments
We thank those researchers from the MRC and the Inspectorate of Factories who helped organise this survey in the 1960s. We thank the National Health Service Central Register (NHSCR) of the Office for National Statistics (ONS) for follow up information. We thank Paul Embley (University of Central England) for assistance with the classification of industrial sectors, Jaswant Bal for data consolidation, and Margaret Williams for word processing. LJK thanks Cancer Research UK for earlier financial support. TS thanks The Energy Institute (formerly The Institute of Petroleum) for recent financial support.
REFERENCES
Footnotes
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Competing interests: none declared