Calibrating a population-based job-exposure matrix using inspection measurements to estimate historical occupational exposure to lead for a population-based cohort in Shanghai, China

被引:0
作者
Dong-Hee Koh
Parveen Bhatti
Joseph B Coble
Patricia A Stewart
Wei Lu
Xiao-Ou Shu
Bu-Tian Ji
Shouzheng Xue
Sarah J Locke
Lutzen Portengen
Gong Yang
Wong-Ho Chow
Yu-Tang Gao
Nathaniel Rothman
Roel Vermeulen
Melissa C Friesen
机构
[1] Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch,Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics
[2] National Cancer Institute,Division of Public Health Sciences
[3] Program in Epidemiology,Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics
[4] Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,Division of Epidemiology, Department of Medicine
[5] Formerly Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch,Environmental and Occupational Health Division
[6] National Cancer Institute,Department of Epidemiology
[7] now Stewart Exposure Assessments,undefined
[8] LLC,undefined
[9] Shanghai Municipal Center for Disease Control,undefined
[10] Vanderbilt Epidemiology Center,undefined
[11] Vanderbilt University School of Medicine,undefined
[12] Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences,undefined
[13] University of Utrecht,undefined
[14] Shanghai Cancer Institute,undefined
[15] Shanghai,undefined
来源
Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology | 2014年 / 24卷
关键词
lead; cancer; exposure assessment; occupational exposure; job-exposure matrix; mixed-effects model;
D O I
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学科分类号
摘要
The epidemiologic evidence for the carcinogenicity of lead is inconsistent and requires improved exposure assessment to estimate risk. We evaluated historical occupational lead exposure for a population-based cohort of women (n=74,942) by calibrating a job-exposure matrix (JEM) with lead fume (n=20,084) and lead dust (n=5383) measurements collected over four decades in Shanghai, China. Using mixed-effect models, we calibrated intensity JEM ratings to the measurements using fixed-effects terms for year and JEM rating. We developed job/industry-specific estimates from the random-effects terms for job and industry. The model estimates were applied to subjects’ jobs when the JEM probability rating was high for either job or industry; remaining jobs were considered unexposed. The models predicted that exposure increased monotonically with JEM intensity rating and decreased 20–50-fold over time. The cumulative calibrated JEM estimates and job/industry-specific estimates were highly correlated (Pearson correlation=0.79–0.84). Overall, 5% of the person-years and 8% of the women were exposed to lead fume; 2% of the person-years and 4% of the women were exposed to lead dust. The most common lead-exposed jobs were manufacturing electronic equipment. These historical lead estimates should enhance our ability to detect associations between lead exposure and cancer risk in the future epidemiologic analyses.
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页码:9 / 16
页数:7
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