School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, 2206 East Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z3, Canada.
Occupational Cancer Research Centre, Cancer Care Ontario, B525 University Avenue, 3rd Floor, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2L3, Canada.
Ann Work Expo Health. 2017 Jul 1;61(6):656-658. doi: 10.1093/annweh/wxx042.
Occupational exposure to antineoplastic agents occurs in various environments and is associated with increased cancer risk and adverse reproductive outcomes. National-level information describing the location and extent of occupational exposure to antineoplastic agents is unavailable in Canada and most other countries. CAREX Canada aimed to estimate the prevalence and relative levels of occupational exposures to antineoplastic agents across work setting, occupation, and sex.
'Exposure' was defined as any potential for worker contact with antineoplastic agents. Baseline numbers of licensed workers were obtained from their respective professional bodies. For unlicensed workers, Census data or data extrapolated from human resources reports (e.g., staffing ratios) were used. Prevalence was estimated by combining population estimates with exposure proportions from peer-reviewed and grey literature. Exposure levels (classified as low, moderate, and high) by occupation and work setting were estimated qualitatively by combining estimates of contact frequency and exposure control practices.
Approximately 75000 Canadians (0.42% of the total workforce) are estimated as occupationally exposed to antineoplastic agents; over 75% are female. The largest occupational group exposed to antineoplastic agents is community pharmacy workers, with 30200 exposed. By work setting, 39000 workers (52% of all exposed) are located in non-hospital settings; the remaining 48% are exposed in hospitals. The majority (75%) of workers are in the moderate exposure category.
These estimates of the prevalence and location of occupational exposures to antineoplastic agents could be used to identify high-risk groups, estimate disease burden, and target new research and prevention activities. The limited secondary data available for developing these estimates highlights the need for increased quantitative measurement and documentation of antineoplastic agent contamination and exposure, particularly in work environments where use is emerging.
抗肿瘤药物的职业暴露发生在各种环境中,与癌症风险增加和不良生殖结局有关。在加拿大和大多数其他国家,都缺乏描述抗肿瘤药物职业暴露地点和程度的国家级信息。加拿大职业暴露监测(CAREX Canada)旨在估计抗肿瘤药物在各种工作场所、职业和性别中的职业暴露的流行率和相对水平。
“暴露”定义为工人接触抗肿瘤药物的任何潜在可能性。从各自的专业机构获得持照工人的基本人数。对于无证工人,使用人口普查数据或从人力资源报告中推断的数据(例如,人员配备比例)。通过将人口估计数与同行评议和灰色文献中的暴露比例相结合来估计流行率。通过将接触频率和暴露控制实践的估计值相结合,定性地估计职业和工作场所的暴露水平(分为低、中、高)。
估计约有 75000 名加拿大人(占劳动力总数的 0.42%)从事抗肿瘤药物的职业性接触;其中 75%以上是女性。接触抗肿瘤药物的最大职业群体是社区药剂师,有 30200 人接触。按工作场所划分,75000 名工人(所有接触者的 52%)位于非医院环境中;其余 48%在医院接触。大多数(75%)工人处于中度暴露类别。
这些抗肿瘤药物职业暴露的流行率和地点的估计值可用于确定高危人群、估计疾病负担,并为新的研究和预防活动提供目标。开发这些估计值所使用的有限的二手数据突出表明,需要增加对抗肿瘤药物污染和暴露的定量测量和记录,特别是在使用不断增加的工作环境中。