Environ Res 1997 Oct;75(1):56-72
A case-control study of lung cancer mortality in six Gila Basin, Arizona
smelter towns.
Marsh GM, Stone RA, Esmen NA, Gula MJ, Gause
CK, Petersen NJ, Meaney FJ, Rodney S, Prybylski D
ABSTRACT
Department of Biostatistics, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261,
USA. gmarsh+@pitt.edu
To investigate factors related to lung cancer mortality in six Arizona copper
smelter towns, we identified 185 lung cancer cases and two matched controls per
case from decedent residents during 1979-1990. Detailed information on lifetime
residential, occupational, and smoking history was obtained by structured
telephone interviews with knowledgeable informants. Interviews were completed
for 82% of 183 eligible cases and 88% of the targeted number (366) of controls.
Estimated historical environmental exposures to smelter emissions, based on
atmospheric diffusion modeling of measured SO2 concentrations, were linked with
residential histories to derive individual profiles of residential exposure.
Occupational histories were characterized by potential exposure to smelter
emissions, asbestos, and ionizing radiation. Conditional logistic regression was
used to compare study factors in cases and controls with adjustment for
potential confounding factors: gender, Hispanic ethnicity, and smoking. In
overall and gender-specific analyses, no statistically significant associations
were observed between lung cancer risk and any of the measures of residential
exposure to smelter emissions considered (town of residence at time of death,
highest level of exposure, and duration or cumulative exposure above background
levels), or any of the estimated occupational exposures (definite or potential
asbestos, potential ionizing radiation, definite or potential smelter). Among
male residents of some, but not all, towns, there was some evidence of a
positive association between lung cancer risk and reported copper
smelter-related employment (reported as definite), with the highest risk
observed for Miami, Arizona. This study provided little evidence of a positive
association between lung cancer mortality and residential exposure to smelter
emissions. Specific factors associated with the apparent heterogeneity in lung
cancer risk across study towns cannot be identified in this community-based
study.
PMID: 9356195, UI: 98025073 |