Redmond C K
Environ Health Perspect. 1983 Oct;52:67-73. doi: 10.1289/ehp.835267.
The OSHA standard for coke oven emissions, which went into effect in January 1977, sets a permissible exposure limit to coke oven emissions of 150 micrograms/m3 benzene-soluble fraction of total particulate matter (BSFTPM). Review of the epidemiologic evidence for the standard indicates an excess relative risk for lung cancer as high as 16-fold in topside coke oven workers with 15 years of exposure or more. There is also evidence for a consistent dose-response relationship in lung cancer mortality when duration and location of employment at the coke ovens are considered. Dose-response models fitted to these same data indicate that, while excess risks may still occur under the OSHA standard, the predicted levels of increased relative risk would be about 30-50% if a linear dose-response model is assumed and 3-7% if a quadratic model is assumed. Lung cancer mortality data for other steelworkers suggest the predicted excess risk has probably been somewhat overestimated, but lack of information on important confounding factors limits further dose-response analysis.
职业安全与健康管理局(OSHA)的炼焦炉排放标准于1977年1月生效,该标准规定炼焦炉排放的总颗粒物苯可溶部分(BSFTPM)的允许暴露限值为150微克/立方米。对该标准的流行病学证据审查表明,暴露15年或更长时间的炉顶炼焦炉工人患肺癌的相对风险高出多达16倍。当考虑在炼焦炉的工作时长和工作地点时,也有证据表明肺癌死亡率存在一致的剂量反应关系。根据这些相同数据拟合的剂量反应模型表明,虽然在OSHA标准下仍可能出现超额风险,但如果假设线性剂量反应模型,预测的相对风险增加水平约为30-50%,如果假设二次模型,则为3-7%。其他钢铁工人的肺癌死亡率数据表明,预测的超额风险可能有些高估,但重要混杂因素信息的缺乏限制了进一步的剂量反应分析。