Brown C C, Chu K C
Environ Health Perspect. 1983 Apr;50:293-308. doi: 10.1289/ehp.8350293.
Implications of the multistage theory of carcinogenesis for evaluating the effect of exposure to carcinogens in the workplace are described. This theory predicts different patterns of excess risk related to duration of exposure, age at initial exposure, and follow-up time since exposure stopped, depending upon which stage of the carcinogenic process is affected by the carcinogen, i.e., action at an early stage or a late stage. New statistical methodologies are proposed to examine these patterns and are applied to the lung cancer mortality experience from a cohort study of smelter workers exposed to arsenic. Under this multistage hypothesis, the results indicate that arsenic exerts a definite late stage effect though an additional effect at the initial stage cannot be ruled out. The possibilities of biased conclusions resulting from incomplete exposure histories and lack of smoking information are also discussed as well as implications of these results to experimental animal studies.
描述了癌症发生多阶段理论对评估工作场所致癌物暴露影响的意义。该理论预测,根据致癌物影响致癌过程的哪个阶段,即早期作用还是晚期作用,与暴露持续时间、初次暴露年龄以及暴露停止后的随访时间相关的超额风险模式会有所不同。提出了新的统计方法来检验这些模式,并将其应用于一项对接触砷的冶炼工人队列研究的肺癌死亡率经验。在这个多阶段假设下,结果表明砷具有明确的晚期效应,尽管不能排除在初始阶段的额外效应。还讨论了由于暴露史不完整和缺乏吸烟信息导致结论有偏差的可能性,以及这些结果对实验动物研究的意义。