Department of Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.
Crit Rev Toxicol. 2010;40(2):101-25. doi: 10.3109/10408440903352826.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified occupational painting as a human carcinogen based on lung and bladder cancers; however, no specific exposures were implicated. The authors conducted comprehensive meta-analyses of the epidemiological literature on occupational painting and these cancers. The authors abstracted study results and confounder information, and used quantile plots and regression models to evaluate heterogeneity and publication bias. Summary risk estimates were derived and sensitivity analyses performed to evaluate smoking, socioeconomic status (SES), and exposure variables. Where applicable, a Bayesian approach was used to externally adjust for smoking, a major risk factor for both cancers. For lung cancer cohort mortality studies, publication bias and heterogeneity were seen, and earlier studies reported higher risk estimates than later studies. Overall lung cancer summary risk estimates were 1.29 for case-control and 1.22 and 1.36 for cohort morbidity and mortality studies, respectively, and risk estimates for bladder cancer were 1.28 for case-control and 1.14 and 1.27 for cohort morbidity and mortality studies, respectively (all statistically significant). Risks did not differ between painters and mixed occupations. Nonsignificant summary estimates resulted for lung and bladder cancers when controlling for SES, or externally adjusting for smoking in lung cancer studies. Summary risks varied by control source for case-control studies. Residual confounding by smoking and SES, lack of exposure group effect, and publication bias limit the ability of the meta-analyses to explain associations observed between occupational painting and lung and bladder cancers. Given the long latencies for lung and bladder cancers, these weak associations, if real, may not be elucidated through studies of occupational painting today.
国际癌症研究机构(IARC)基于肺癌和膀胱癌,将职业绘画归类为人类致癌物;然而,并没有具体的暴露因素被牵连。作者对职业绘画和这些癌症的流行病学文献进行了全面的荟萃分析。作者提取了研究结果和混杂因素信息,并使用分位数图和回归模型来评估异质性和发表偏倚。得出了汇总风险估计,并进行了敏感性分析,以评估吸烟、社会经济地位(SES)和暴露变量。在适用的情况下,使用贝叶斯方法对外来调整吸烟进行了调整,吸烟是这两种癌症的主要危险因素。对于肺癌队列死亡率研究,存在发表偏倚和异质性,早期研究报告的风险估计值高于后期研究。总体肺癌病例对照研究的汇总风险估计值分别为 1.29,队列发病率和死亡率研究分别为 1.22 和 1.36,膀胱癌病例对照研究的汇总风险估计值分别为 1.28,队列发病率和死亡率研究分别为 1.14 和 1.27(均具有统计学意义)。在控制 SES 或在肺癌研究中对外来调整吸烟后,肺部和膀胱癌的风险差异无统计学意义。对于病例对照研究,当控制 SES 或对外来调整肺癌研究中的吸烟后,汇总风险估计值无显著差异。对于病例对照研究,汇总风险因对照组来源而异。吸烟和 SES 残留混杂、缺乏暴露组效应以及发表偏倚限制了荟萃分析解释职业绘画与肺癌和膀胱癌之间观察到的关联的能力。鉴于肺癌和膀胱癌的潜伏期较长,如果这些弱关联是真实存在的,那么通过今天对职业绘画的研究可能无法阐明这些关联。