Mesothelioma Risk in
British people who’ve worked in high-risk jobs like carpentry and plumbing, especially before age 30, are at greatest risk of developing the deadly lung cancer, mesothelioma, according to a recent study in the British Journal of Cancer.
Mesothelioma is caused by asbestos exposure. Although regulations have reduced the amount of asbestos in both British and American buildings since the 1970s, the mesothelioma death rate in
This study included 622 mesothelioma patients in
The researchers discovered that carpenters faced the greatest mesothelioma risk --particularly those who had worked for 10 years or more in the industry before age 30. The authors say more than one out of every 10 British carpenters born in the 1940s is likely to die of mesothelioma or another type of cancer caused by asbestos.
Plumbers, electricians, insulation workers, and shipbuilders were also at increased risk of mesothelioma, the study found. Overall, the authors say 85 percent of mesothelioma cases in men, and 22 percent of cases in women can be attributed to work-related exposures. Most mesothelioma cases were due to asbestos exposure that occurred before 1980, when its use was still high.
The reduction in asbestos use since the 1970s may lead to a drop in future mesothelioma cases—but that is something the researchers will need to track. “The proportion will probably decline, but we don’t know by how much,” says lead author Julian Peto, Professor of Epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. “We are continuing to interview mesothelioma patients, and we are also getting lung samples for asbestos fiber analysis…to see whether young construction workers are still being exposed.”
The only non-work-related risk the study found was among people who had lived with a spouse or other family member who was potentially exposed to asbestos at work. Again, this exposure was most significant when it occurred before age 30.
Living close to an environmental source of asbestos, such as a power plant or asbestos factory, didn’t seem to increase the mesothelioma risk. Smoking also had no apparent effect on risk.
This study was conducted in
Asbestos will remain a worry to scientists and health professionals into the future, and this study underscores the need for continued vigilance. “We have to ensure that occupational (and other) exposure is avoided for everyone,” Dr. Peto says.
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