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Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.

The risk of lung cancer associated with diesel exhaust has been calculated from 14 case-control or cohort studies. We evaluated the findings from these studies to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to implicate diesel exhaust as a human lung carcinogen. Four studies found increased risks...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Muscat, J E, Wynder, E L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7498093
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author Muscat, J E
Wynder, E L
author_facet Muscat, J E
Wynder, E L
author_sort Muscat, J E
collection PubMed
description The risk of lung cancer associated with diesel exhaust has been calculated from 14 case-control or cohort studies. We evaluated the findings from these studies to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to implicate diesel exhaust as a human lung carcinogen. Four studies found increased risks associated with long-term exposure, although two of the four studies were based on the same cohort of railroad workers. Six studies were inconclusive due to missing information on smoking habits, internal inconsistencies, or inadequate characterization of diesel exposure. Four studies found no statistically significant associations. It can be concluded that short-term exposure to diesel engine exhaust (< 20 years) does not have a causative role in human lung cancer. There is statistical but not causal evidence that long-term exposure to diesel exhaust (> 20 years) increases the risk of lung cancer for locomotive engineers, brakemen, and diesel engine mechanics. There is inconsistent evidence on the effects of long-term exposure to diesel exhaust in the trucking industry. There is no evidence for a joint effect of diesel exhaust and cigarette smoking on lung cancer risk. Using common criteria for determining causal associations, the epidemiologic evidence is insufficient to establish diesel engine exhaust as a human lung carcinogen.
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spelling pubmed-15192192006-07-28 Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association. Muscat, J E Wynder, E L Environ Health Perspect Research Article The risk of lung cancer associated with diesel exhaust has been calculated from 14 case-control or cohort studies. We evaluated the findings from these studies to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to implicate diesel exhaust as a human lung carcinogen. Four studies found increased risks associated with long-term exposure, although two of the four studies were based on the same cohort of railroad workers. Six studies were inconclusive due to missing information on smoking habits, internal inconsistencies, or inadequate characterization of diesel exposure. Four studies found no statistically significant associations. It can be concluded that short-term exposure to diesel engine exhaust (< 20 years) does not have a causative role in human lung cancer. There is statistical but not causal evidence that long-term exposure to diesel exhaust (> 20 years) increases the risk of lung cancer for locomotive engineers, brakemen, and diesel engine mechanics. There is inconsistent evidence on the effects of long-term exposure to diesel exhaust in the trucking industry. There is no evidence for a joint effect of diesel exhaust and cigarette smoking on lung cancer risk. Using common criteria for determining causal associations, the epidemiologic evidence is insufficient to establish diesel engine exhaust as a human lung carcinogen. 1995-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1519219/ /pubmed/7498093 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Muscat, J E
Wynder, E L
Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.
title Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.
title_full Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.
title_fullStr Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.
title_full_unstemmed Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.
title_short Diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.
title_sort diesel engine exhaust and lung cancer: an unproven association.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7498093
work_keys_str_mv AT muscatje dieselengineexhaustandlungcanceranunprovenassociation
AT wynderel dieselengineexhaustandlungcanceranunprovenassociation