Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/5107
Title: The two-stage clonal expansion model in occupational cancer epidemiology: Results from three cohort studies
Authors: Zeka, A
Gore, R
Kriebel, D
Issue Date: 2010
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group
Citation: Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Online, Nov 2010
Abstract: Objectives: The objective of this work was to apply the two-stage clonal expansion model, with the intention to expand the literature on epidemiological applications of the model and demonstrate the feasibility of incorporating biologically based modelling methods into the widely used retrospective cohort study. Methods: The authors fitted the two-stage clonal expansion model model to three occupational cohort studies: (1) a cohort of textile workers exposed to asbestos and followed for lung cancer mortality; (2) a cohort of diatomaceous earth workers exposed to silica and also followed for lung cancer mortality; and (3) a cohort of automotive manufacturing workers exposed to straight metalworking fluid (MWF) and followed for larynx cancer incidence. The model allowed the authors to estimate exposure effects in three stages: cancer initiation (early effects), promotion or malignant transformation (late effects). Results: In the first cohort, the authors found strong evidence for an early effect of asbestos on lung cancer risk. Findings from analyses of the second cohort suggested early and less evidently late effects of silica on lung cancer risk. In the MWF (third) cohort, there was only weak evidence of straight MWF exposure effects on both early and late stages. The authors also observed a late birth cohort effect on larynx cancer risk. Conclusions: The findings for asbestos and silica were essentially confirmatory, supporting evidence for their early effects on lung cancer from a large body of literature. The effect of straight MWF on larynx cancer was less clear.
Description: Copyright © 2010 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. All rights reserved.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/5107
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/oem.2009.053983
ISSN: 1470-7926
Appears in Collections:Environment
Community Health and Public Health
Institute for the Environment

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