Heidecker Bettina, Spencer Rachel Maureen, Hayes Victoria, Hall Sarah, Parikh Nisha, Stock Eveline Oestreicher, Redberg Rita
University of Zurich, Switzerland.
UC Berkeley/University of California, San Francisco Joint Medical Program.
Am J Med. 2017 Dec;130(12):1397-1401. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2017.05.032. Epub 2017 Jun 15.
There are many occupational health hazards associated with long hours of air travel, including cosmic radiation exposure, circadian rhythm disruptions, prior and secondhand smoke exposure, for flight attendants who flew before smoking bans were initiated in the 1990s. Previous studies in flight attendants have found increased incidence of breast cancer and melanoma. However, there is little information on the relationship of airline travel and reproductive health in flight attendants. Secondhand smoke exposure has numerous negative health effects, such as increased cardiac events and respiratory infections, but its effect on reproductive health is not known. This study seeks to examine the role of secondhand smoke exposure on the miscarriage rate in flight attendants who flew before the smoking ban.
Flight attendants who flew before the smoking ban and participating in a study of health effects of secondhand smoke were asked to complete a reproductive health survey. We compared miscarriage rates of flight attendants to the general population using 2010 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In our cohort of 145 female flight attendants exposed to secondhand smoke, there were 45 miscarriages (26%), compared with a 17.1% rate in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report (P = .002). There was no difference in secondhand smoke exposure between the flight attendants with miscarriage and the group without miscarriage (P = .93).
This study found an increased incidence of miscarriage in flight attendants, which was unrelated to secondhand smoke exposure. Other factors, such as circadian rhythm disruption and radiation, may be related to these reproductive health findings and require further investigation.
长时间空中旅行存在许多职业健康危害,包括宇宙辐射暴露、昼夜节律紊乱、二手烟暴露(对于20世纪90年代实施禁烟令之前飞行的空乘人员而言)。此前针对空乘人员的研究发现乳腺癌和黑色素瘤的发病率有所上升。然而,关于航空旅行与空乘人员生殖健康之间的关系,相关信息较少。二手烟暴露会对健康产生诸多负面影响,如心脏事件增加和呼吸道感染,但它对生殖健康的影响尚不清楚。本研究旨在探讨二手烟暴露对禁烟令之前飞行的空乘人员流产率的作用。
要求在禁烟令之前飞行且参与二手烟健康影响研究的空乘人员完成一项生殖健康调查。我们使用疾病控制与预防中心2010年的数据,将空乘人员的流产率与普通人群进行了比较。
在我们这145名暴露于二手烟的女性空乘人员队列中,有45例流产(26%),而疾病控制与预防中心报告中的流产率为17.1%(P = 0.002)。流产的空乘人员与未流产的空乘人员在二手烟暴露方面没有差异(P = 0.93)。
本研究发现空乘人员的流产率有所上升,这与二手烟暴露无关。其他因素,如昼夜节律紊乱和辐射,可能与这些生殖健康结果有关,需要进一步调查。