Steenland Kyle, Deddens James
Emory University School of Public Health, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Ind Health. 2003 Jul;41(3):175-80. doi: 10.2486/indhealth.41.175.
Low-levels of dioxin cause cancer in animals. In 1997 dioxin was found to be a human carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, based largely on four studies of industrial workers exposed to high levels. Recently there has been interest in estimating human cancer risk at low level environmental exposures. Here we review quantitative exposure-response analyses and risk assessment for low environmental levels based on the largest existing cohort of workers exposed to dioxin (the U.S. NIOSH cohort). We estimate that doubling background levels of exposure, which may occur for example by eating a lot of fish which have accumulated dioxin, will increase lifetime risk of cancer death by 0.1 to 1.0%. In the US the background risk of cancer death by age 75 is 12%, so doubling background levels of dioxin exposure would increase this lifetime risk to somewhere between 12.1 and 13.0%. Our results agree broadly with results from a German cohort, which is the only other cohort for which a quantitative risk assessment has been conducted.
低剂量的二噁英会导致动物患癌。1997年,国际癌症研究机构认定二噁英为人类致癌物,这主要基于对接触高剂量二噁英的产业工人的四项研究。最近,人们开始关注估算低水平环境暴露下的人类癌症风险。在此,我们基于现有的最大规模接触二噁英工人队列(美国国家职业安全与健康研究所队列),回顾了针对低环境水平的定量暴露-反应分析和风险评估。我们估计,将背景暴露水平翻倍(例如,通过大量食用积累了二噁英的鱼类可能会出现这种情况),会使癌症死亡的终生风险增加0.1%至1.0%。在美国,75岁时癌症死亡的背景风险为12%,因此将二噁英背景暴露水平翻倍会使这种终生风险增加到12.1%至13.0%之间的某个值。我们的结果与德国队列的结果大致相符,德国队列是唯一进行过定量风险评估的另一队列。