RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 0357 The lifetime risk approach to estimating the burden of occupational cancer JF Occupational and Environmental Medicine JO Occup Environ Med FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP A44 OP A44 DO 10.1136/oemed-2014-102362.136 VO 71 IS Suppl 1 A1 Fritschi, Lin A1 Carey, Renee A1 Peters, Susan A1 Reid, Alison A1 Driscoll, Tim A1 Rushton, Lesley A1 Glass, Deborah A1 Hutchings, Sally YR 2014 UL http://oem.bmj.com/content/71/Suppl_1/A44.2.abstract AB Objectives The main approaches to estimating the burden of occupational cancer are attributable risk and lifetime risk. In this presentation we will explain why we used the lifetime risk approach. Method The lifetime risk of cancer is an estimation of an individual’s risk of being diagnosed with cancer during their life (without considering occupational exposures). The lifetime risk for the general population (LRGP) is estimated by multiplying cohort person-years-at-risk (from life table data) by age-sex specific incidence rates. The excess lifetime risk of cancer in a cohort of workers exposed to the carcinogen of interest (LRexposed) is a product of the LRGP and the excess relative risk of developing cancer associated with that exposure. LRexposed is multiplied by the prevalence of exposure to obtain the number of cancers attributable to the exposure in the general working population. Results The lifetime risk approach estimates the number of cancers which would occur over a number of years in the future, due to exposures in a specific year. In contrast, the attributable risk approach estimates the number of cancers which would occur in a specific year due to exposures over a number of years in the past. Because we had exposure prevalence information for a specific year based on a national survey, we determined that the lifetime risk approach was more applicable in our case. Conclusions The lifetime risk approach is an alternative method for calculating burden of disease when exposure prevalence information is available.