Pruitt Caroline N, Fisher Jared A, Flory Abigail R, Graubard Barry I, Ward Mary H, Jones Rena R, Madrigal Jessica M
Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Rockville, MD, USA.
Westat Inc., Rockville, MD, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2025 Jul 15;986:179674. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179674. Epub 2025 May 30.
Industrial facilities are not located uniformly across the United States (U.S.), and little is known about the quantity of suspected human carcinogens emitted from these sources on a nationwide scale. We evaluated differences in potential exposure to these agents among sociodemographic groups in the U.S. and Puerto Rico.
We used a U.S. regulatory database to identify emissions (pounds) of 32 probable human carcinogens as classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. We linked the 2010-2018 average emissions for each agent to 2010 Census tract boundaries and sociodemographic characteristics. We used multinomial, population density-adjusted logistic regression to estimate the odds of a census tract having the highest agent-specific emissions (tertile or quintile) for all sociodemographic predictors (e.g., race and ethnicity, educational attainment, and family poverty).
Industrial facilities emitted an average 32.2 million pounds of probable carcinogens annually across tracts with an estimated 32.8 million residents. The highest proportions of emissions occurred in the South and Midwest and in urban and suburban tracts. The odds of tracts having the greatest burden of dichloromethane, lead, styrene, tetrachloroethylene, acrylamide, aniline, creosote, and epichlorohydrin emissions compared to those with zero emissions were 5 %-43 % higher for Black Americans, whereas White populations were up to 23 % less likely to live in tracts with the highest emissions. Among Hispanics and Latinos, odds were 7 %-14 % higher for dichloromethane, styrene, tetrachloroethylene, and N,N-dimethylformamide. Odds of the highest emissions burden were up to 51 % higher for populations experiencing poverty or with less than high school education, and remained elevated for Black, Hispanic and Latino, and White populations in these strata.
Our novel assessment demonstrates that industrial air emissions of organic and inorganic pollutants that may be carcinogenic to humans disproportionately impact Americans of lower socioeconomic status and who identify as Black, Hispanic, or Latino.
工业设施在美国各地的分布并不均匀,对于这些来源在全国范围内排放的疑似人类致癌物的数量,人们了解甚少。我们评估了美国和波多黎各社会人口群体在接触这些物质方面的差异。
我们使用美国监管数据库来确定国际癌症研究机构分类的32种可能的人类致癌物的排放量(磅)。我们将每种物质2010 - 2018年的平均排放量与2010年人口普查区边界和社会人口特征相关联。我们使用多项、人口密度调整后的逻辑回归来估计所有社会人口预测因素(如种族和族裔、教育程度和家庭贫困状况)下,人口普查区具有最高特定物质排放量(三分位数或五分位数)的几率。
工业设施每年在各区域平均排放约3220万磅可能的致癌物,这些区域估计有3280万居民。排放量最高的比例出现在南部和中西部以及城市和郊区。与零排放的区域相比,非裔美国人居住的区域二氯甲烷、铅、苯乙烯、四氯乙烯、丙烯酰胺、苯胺、杂酚油和环氧氯丙烷排放量负担最大的几率要高5% - 43%,而白人居住在排放量最高区域的可能性则低23%。在西班牙裔和拉丁裔中,二氯甲烷、苯乙烯、四氯乙烯和N,N - 二甲基甲酰胺排放量负担最大的几率要高7% - 14%。贫困或受教育程度低于高中的人群排放量负担最大的几率要高51%,在这些阶层中,黑人、西班牙裔和拉丁裔以及白人的排放量负担仍然较高。
我们的新评估表明,可能对人类致癌的有机和无机污染物的工业空气排放对社会经济地位较低以及非裔、西班牙裔或拉丁裔美国人的影响尤为严重。