Kusiak R A, Springer J, Ritchie A C, Muller J
Health and Safety Studies Unit, Ontario Ministry of Labour, Toronto, Canada.
Br J Ind Med. 1991 Dec;48(12):808-17. doi: 10.1136/oem.48.12.808.
A cohort of 54,128 men who worked in Ontario mines was observed for mortality between 1955 and 1986. Most of these men worked in nickel, gold, or uranium mines; a few worked in silver, iron, lead/zinc, or other ore mines. If mortality that occurred after a man had started to mine uranium was excluded, an excess of carcinoma of the lung was found among the 13,603 Ontario gold miners in the study (standardised mortality ratio (SMR) 129, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 115-145) and in men who began to mine nickel before 1936 (SMR 141, 95% CI 105-184). The excess mortality from lung cancer in the gold miners was confined to men who began gold mining before 1946. No increase in the mortality from carcinoma of the lung was evident in men who began mining gold after the end of 1945, in men who began mining nickel after 1936, or in men who mined ores other than gold, nickel, and uranium. In the gold mines each year of employment before the end of 1945 was associated with a 6.5% increase in mortality from lung cancer 20 or more years after the miner began working the mines (95% CI 1.6-11.4%); each year of employment before the end of 1945 in mines in which the host rock contained 0.1% arsenic was associated with a 3.1% increase in lung cancer 20 years or more after exposure began (95% CI 1.1-5.1%); and each working level month of exposure to radon decay products was associated with a 1.2% increase in mortality from lung cancer five or more years after exposure began (95% CI 0.02-2.4%). A comparison of two models shows that the excess of lung cancer mortality in Ontario gold miners is associated with exposure to high dust concentrations before 1946, with exposure to arsenic before 1946, and with exposure to radon decay products. No association between the increased incidence of carcinoma of the lung in Ontario gold miners and exposure to mineral fibre could be detected. It is concluded that the excess of carcinoma of the lung in Ontario gold miners is probably due to exposure to arsenic and radon decay products.
对安大略省矿山工作的54128名男性队列进行了1955年至1986年期间的死亡率观察。这些男性大多在镍矿、金矿或铀矿工作;少数在银矿、铁矿、铅锌矿或其他矿石矿工作。如果排除男性开始开采铀矿后发生的死亡病例,在该研究中的13603名安大略省金矿工人中发现肺癌超额(标准化死亡比(SMR)为129,95%置信区间(95%CI)为115 - 145),以及在1936年前开始开采镍矿的男性中(SMR为141,95%CI为105 - 184)。金矿工人肺癌的超额死亡率仅限于1946年前开始金矿开采的男性。1945年底后开始开采金矿的男性、1936年后开始开采镍矿的男性或开采除金、镍和铀之外其他矿石的男性中,肺癌死亡率没有明显增加。在金矿中,1945年底前的每一年工作与矿工开始工作20年或更长时间后肺癌死亡率增加6.5%相关(95%CI为1.6 - 11.4%);在主岩含0.1%砷的矿山中,1945年底前的每一年工作与接触开始20年或更长时间后肺癌增加3.1%相关(95%CI为1.1 - 5.1%);以及每接触氡衰变产物一个工作水平月与接触开始5年或更长时间后肺癌死亡率增加1.2%相关(95%CI为0.02 - 2.4%)。两种模型的比较表明,安大略省金矿工人肺癌死亡率超额与1946年前接触高粉尘浓度、1946年前接触砷以及接触氡衰变产物有关。未检测到安大略省金矿工人肺癌发病率增加与接触矿物纤维之间的关联。得出结论,安大略省金矿工人肺癌超额可能归因于接触砷和氡衰变产物。