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Occupational Risk Factors for Prostate Cancer Mortality in British Columbia, Canada

Authors :
Nhu D. Le
Pierre R. Band
Joel L. Bert
Richard P. Gallagher
Jane A. Buxton
Source :
American Journal of Industrial Medicine. 35:82-86
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Wiley, 1999.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Although prostate cancer is the most common life-threatening cancer among males in North America, relatively little is known about its etiology. We have conducted a proportional mortality study to generate hypotheses concerning occupational risk factors for the disease. METHODS Age standardized proportional mortality ratios (PMR) for prostate cancer were calculated for a total of 216 occupations and 88 industries. Separate calculations were done for all male deaths age 20 and up and for deaths that occurred during men's working lifetime (age 20-65). RESULTS Elevated mortality from prostate cancer was seen among business owners and managers (PMR = 110; 95% CI = 101-118), brokers (PMR = 184; 95% CI = 122-266), farmers and farm managers (PMR = 112; 95% CI = 105-120), and school teachers (PMR = 133; 95% CI = 101-174). Evaluation by industry shows elevated prostate cancer mortality in agriculture (PMR = 110; 95% CI = 103-118), financial institutions (PMR = 138, 95% CI = 112-170), and transportation equipment manufacture (PMR = 136; 95% CI = 109-168). CONCLUSIONS The findings suggest that workers in a number of occupations have elevated risks of prostate cancer including farmers and teachers. More detailed cohort and case-control studies, evaluating specific exposures are required before primary prevention programs in the workplace are feasible.

Details

ISSN :
10970274 and 02713586
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Industrial Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e3c45d3bd3edc3c2f7a61168de672c34
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0274(199901)35:1<82::aid-ajim11>3.0.co;2-e