Demers P A, Vaughan T L, Checkoway H, Weiss N S, Heyer N J, Rosenstock L
Department of Environmental Health, University of Washington, Seattle.
Am J Epidemiol. 1992 Nov 15;136(10):1232-40. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a116431.
Studies of cancer incidences among occupational cohorts are rarely performed in the United States because of incomplete registration and a limited time period available for follow-up. This study used data from concurrent studies of cancer mortality and incidence among a cohort of 4,528 fire fighters and police officers employed by the cities of Seattle and Tacoma, Washington, between 1944 and 1979 to examine the relative advantages of tumor registry and death certificate information. As expected, an increased ability to study relatively common cancers with low fatality rates was demonstrated using incidence data. The most dramatic example was seen for bladder cancer. Twenty-four bladder cancers had been diagnosed among the study cohort between 1974 and 1989, whereas only two deaths were attributed to this malignancy. The standardized incidence ratio for bladder cancer was 1.05 (95% confidence interval 0.67-1.55), whereas the corresponding standardized mortality ratio was 0.46 (95% confidence interval 0.05-1.65). The observed relative risk estimates for rapidly fatal cancers were similar using the two sources of information, and no increase in precision was observed. Of 142 persons in the registry area who died of cancer during the study period, 20 (14%) had a different site listed on the death certificate than was identified by the registry. Approximately 7% of the potential person-years of follow-up were lost due to migration out of the registry area; loss to follow-up was greater among older and short-term workers, but did not exceed 13% of the person-years. Population-based tumor registries can be a useful resource in the investigation of occupational cancer in the United States, especially for the study of cancers with high survival rates.
在美国,由于登记不完整以及随访时间有限,很少对职业队列中的癌症发病率进行研究。本研究使用了1944年至1979年间华盛顿州西雅图市和塔科马市雇佣的4528名消防员和警察队列中癌症死亡率和发病率的同期研究数据,以检验肿瘤登记和死亡证明信息的相对优势。正如预期的那样,使用发病率数据显示出研究相对常见且死亡率较低的癌症的能力有所提高。最显著的例子是膀胱癌。在1974年至1989年间,研究队列中诊断出24例膀胱癌,而仅有2例死亡归因于这种恶性肿瘤。膀胱癌的标准化发病率比为1.05(95%置信区间0.67 - 1.55),而相应的标准化死亡率比为0.46(95%置信区间0.05 - 1.65)。使用这两种信息来源对快速致命癌症的观察到的相对风险估计相似,且未观察到精度提高。在研究期间登记区域内死于癌症的142人中,有20人(14%)在死亡证明上列出的部位与登记处确定的不同。由于迁出登记区域,大约7%的潜在随访人年流失;老年和短期工人的失访率更高,但不超过人年的13%。基于人群的肿瘤登记在美国职业癌症调查中可能是一种有用的资源,特别是对于高生存率癌症的研究。