Occupation and male lung cancer: a case-control study in northern Sweden.

Using a case-control study comprising about 600 men with lung cancer in northern Sweden the potential risk of different occupations and groups of occupations was studied. Longitudinal data concerning occupation, employment, and smoking habits were obtained by questionnaires. Some occupational groups...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Main Authors: Damber, L A, Larsson, L G
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd 1987
Subjects:
Online Access:http://oem.bmj.com/cgi/content/short/44/7/446
https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.44.7.446
Description
Summary:Using a case-control study comprising about 600 men with lung cancer in northern Sweden the potential risk of different occupations and groups of occupations was studied. Longitudinal data concerning occupation, employment, and smoking habits were obtained by questionnaires. Some occupational groups (underground miners, copper smelter workers, electricians, and plumbers) exposed to previously known lung carcinogenic agents such as radon daughters, arsenic, and asbestos, had considerably increased odds ratios, which persisted after adjustment for smoking. A slightly raised odds ratio was observed in a group of blue collar workers potentially exposed to lung carcinogenic agents; this rise in the group as a whole mainly disappeared after adjustment for smoking. Farmers and foresters had strikingly low odds ratios, which could only partly be explained by their more moderate smoking habits. The population aetiological fraction attributable to occupation was estimated as 9%.