Arch Environ Health 1998 Jan-Feb;53(1):15-28
A case-control study of lung cancer mortality in four rural 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.
To investigate factors related to lung cancer mortality in four Arizona
copper-smelter towns, the authors identified 142 lung cancer cases and 2 matched
controls per case from decedent residents during 1979-1990. The authors obtained
detailed information on lifetime residential, occupational, and smoking
histories via structured telephone interviews with knowledgeable informants. The
authors linked estimated historical environmental exposures to smelter emissions
(based on atmospheric diffusion modeling of measured sulfur dioxide
concentrations) with residential histories to derive individual profiles of
residential exposure. The results of this study provided little evidence of a
positive association between lung cancer and residential exposure to smelter
emissions. Conditional logistic regression analysis revealed a statistically
significant positive association between lung cancer and reported employment in
copper mines and/or smelters, although specific factors associated with the
apparently increased risk among these workers could not be identified in this
community-based study.
PMID: 9570305, UI: 98230231 |