Cardno ChemRisk, Boston, MA, USA.
Ramboll US Consulting Inc., Amherst, MA, USA.
BMC Cancer. 2021 Mar 6;21(1):227. doi: 10.1186/s12885-021-07908-3.
Although myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), acute myeloid leukemia (AML), myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) - including chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) - and myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasms (MDS/MPN) are largely clinically distinct myeloid malignancies, epidemiological studies rarely examine them separately and often combine them with lymphoid malignancies, limiting possible etiological interpretations for specific myeloid malignancies.
We systematically evaluated the epidemiological literature on the four chemical agents (1,3-butadiene, formaldehyde, benzene, and tobacco smoking, excluding pharmaceutical, microbial and radioactive agents, and pesticides) classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer as having sufficient epidemiological evidence to conclude that each causes "myeloid malignancies." Literature searches of IARC Monographs and PubMed identified 85 studies that we critically assessed, and for appropriate subsets, summarized results using meta-analysis.
Only two epidemiological studies on 1,3-butadiene were identified, but reported findings were inadequate to evaluate specific myeloid malignancies. Studies on formaldehyde reported results for AML and CML - and not for MDS or MPN - but reported no increased risks. For benzene, several specific myeloid malignancies were evaluated, with consistent associations reported with AML and MDS and mixed results for CML. Studies of tobacco smoking examined all major myeloid malignancies, demonstrating consistent relationships with AML, MDS and MPN, but not with CML.
Surprisingly few epidemiological studies present results for specific myeloid malignancies, and those identified were inconsistent across studies of the same exposure, as well as across chemical agents. This exercise illustrates that even for agents classified as having sufficient evidence of causing "myeloid malignancies," the epidemiological evidence for specific myeloid malignancies is generally limited and inconsistent. Future epidemiological studies should report findings for the specific myeloid malignancies, as combining them post hoc - where appropriate - always remains possible, whereas disaggregation may not. Furthermore, combining results across possibly discrete diseases reduces the chances of identifying important malignancy-specific causal associations.
尽管骨髓增生异常综合征(MDS)、急性髓系白血病(AML)、骨髓增殖性肿瘤(MPN)——包括慢性髓系白血病(CML)——和骨髓增生异常/骨髓增殖性肿瘤(MDS/MPN)在临床上有很大的区别,但流行病学研究很少单独研究它们,通常将它们与淋巴恶性肿瘤结合起来,限制了对特定髓性恶性肿瘤的可能病因解释。
我们系统地评估了国际癌症研究机构(IARC)分类的四种化学物质(1,3-丁二烯、甲醛、苯和吸烟,不包括药物、微生物和放射性物质以及农药)的流行病学文献,这些物质具有足够的流行病学证据可以得出结论,认为每种物质都会导致“髓性恶性肿瘤”。IARC 专论和 PubMed 的文献检索确定了 85 项我们进行了严格评估的研究,并对适当的亚组进行了荟萃分析总结结果。
仅确定了两项关于 1,3-丁二烯的流行病学研究,但报告的结果不足以评估特定的髓性恶性肿瘤。甲醛研究报告了 AML 和 CML 的结果——而不是 MDS 或 MPN——但没有报告增加的风险。对于苯,评估了几种特定的髓性恶性肿瘤,一致报告与 AML 和 MDS 相关,CML 的结果则不一致。吸烟的研究检查了所有主要的髓性恶性肿瘤,一致显示与 AML、MDS 和 MPN 有关,但与 CML 无关。
令人惊讶的是,很少有流行病学研究报告特定髓性恶性肿瘤的结果,而且同一暴露的研究以及不同化学物质的研究结果不一致。这项工作表明,即使对于被归类为有足够证据导致“髓性恶性肿瘤”的物质,特定髓性恶性肿瘤的流行病学证据通常也是有限和不一致的。未来的流行病学研究应报告特定髓性恶性肿瘤的研究结果,因为事后将它们结合在一起——在适当的情况下——始终是可能的,而分解则不然。此外,将可能离散的疾病的结果结合起来,会降低识别重要的肿瘤特异性因果关联的机会。