A collaborative study of cancer incidence and mortality among vinyl chloride workers

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Abstract

A large European multicentric cohort study has been coordinated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer with the objectives of investigating the dose-response relationship between liver cancer and exposure to vinyl chloride and assessing cancer risk for sites other than the liver. A nearly threefold increase in liver cancer was detected on the basis of 24 observed deaths and 8.4 expected (standardized mortality ratio 286, 95% confidence interval 186-425). The excess from liver cancer was clearly related to time since first exposure, duration of employment, and estimated ranked and quantitative exposures. Other cancer sites investigated on the basis of a priori hypotheses were either not in excess (lung) or apparently unrelated to the exposure variables (brain and lymphoma).

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Simonato, L., L’Abbe, K. A., Andersen, A., Belli, S., Comba, P., Engholm, G., … Saracci, R. (1991). A collaborative study of cancer incidence and mortality among vinyl chloride workers. Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health, 17(3), 159–169. https://doi.org/10.5271/sjweh.1715

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