Academic Urology Unit, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom.
Department of Pathology, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Sheffield, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 21;15(10):e0239338. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0239338. eCollection 2020.
Up to 10% of Bladder Cancers may arise following occupational exposure to carcinogens. We hypothesised that different cancer phenotypes reflected different patterns of occupational exposure.
Consecutive participants, with bladder cancer, self-completed a structured questionnaire detailing employment, tasks, exposures, smoking, lifestyle and family history. Our primary outcome was association between cancer phenotype and occupational details.
We collected questionnaires from 536 patients, of whom 454 (85%) participants (352 men and 102 women) were included. Women were less likely to be smokers (68% vs. 81% Chi sq. p<0.001), but more likely than men to inhale environmental tobacco smoke at home (82% vs. 74% p = 0.08) and use hair dye (56% vs. 3%, p<0.001). Contact with potential carcinogens occurred in 282 (62%) participants (mean 3.1 per worker (range 0-14)). High-grade cancer was more common than low-grade disease in workers from the steel, foundry, metal, engineering and transport industries (p<0.05), and in workers exposed to crack detection dyes, chromium, coal/oil/gas by-products, diesel fumes/fuel/aircraft fuel and solvents (such as trichloroethylene). Higher staged cancers were frequent in workers exposed to Chromium, coal products and diesel exhaust fumes/fuel (p<0.05). Various workers (e.g. exposed to diesel fuels or fumes (Cox, HR 1.97 (95% CI 1.31-2.98) p = 0.001), employed in a garage (HR 2.19 (95% CI 1.31-3.63) p = 0.001), undertaking plumbing/gas fitting/ventilation (HR 2.15 (95% CI 1.15-4.01) p = 0.017), undertaking welding (HR 1.85 (95% CI 1.24-2.77) p = 0.003) and exposed to welding materials (HR 1.92 (95% CI 1.27-2.91) p = 0.002)) were more likely to have disease progression and receive radical treatment than others. Fewer than expected deaths were seen in healthcare workers (HR 0.17 (95% CI 0.04-0.70) p = 0.014).
We identified multiple occupational tasks and contacts associated with bladder cancer. There were some associations with phenotype, although our study design precludes robust assessment.
多达 10%的膀胱癌可能是由于职业暴露于致癌物质引起的。我们假设不同的癌症表型反映了不同的职业暴露模式。
连续的参与者,患有膀胱癌,自行完成一份详细的就业、任务、暴露、吸烟、生活方式和家族史的结构化问卷。我们的主要结果是癌症表型与职业细节之间的关联。
我们从 536 名患者中收集了问卷,其中 454 名(85%)参与者(352 名男性和 102 名女性)被纳入研究。女性吸烟者比例较低(68%比 81%卡方检验,p<0.001),但在家中吸入环境烟草烟雾的比例高于男性(82%比 74%,p=0.08),使用染发剂的比例也高于男性(56%比 3%,p<0.001)。有 282 名(62%)参与者接触过潜在的致癌物质(每位工人平均 3.1 次(范围 0-14))。在钢铁、铸造、金属、工程和运输行业工作的工人中,高级别癌症比低级别疾病更为常见(p<0.05),在接触裂纹检测染料、铬、煤/油/气副产品、柴油烟雾/燃料/飞机燃料和溶剂(如三氯乙烯)的工人中也是如此。接触铬、煤制品和柴油废气/燃料的工人中,更常见的是高级别癌症(p<0.05)。各种工人(例如暴露于柴油燃料或烟雾(考克斯,HR 1.97(95%CI 1.31-2.98)p=0.001),在车库工作(HR 2.19(95%CI 1.31-3.63)p=0.001),从事管道/燃气配件/通风(HR 2.15(95%CI 1.15-4.01)p=0.017),从事焊接(HR 1.85(95%CI 1.24-2.77)p=0.003)和接触焊接材料(HR 1.92(95%CI 1.27-2.91)p=0.002))更有可能出现疾病进展并接受激进治疗。与其他工人相比,医疗保健工作者的死亡人数低于预期(HR 0.17(95%CI 0.04-0.70)p=0.014)。
我们确定了多个与膀胱癌相关的职业任务和接触。虽然我们的研究设计排除了可靠的评估,但与表型存在一些关联。