SYN-JEM: A Quantitative Job-Exposure Matrix for Five Lung Carcinogens

Publication date

2016-08-01

Authors

Peters, SusanISNI 0000000419418108
Vermeulen, RoelORCID 0000-0003-4082-8163ISNI 0000000396780074
Portengen, L??tzen
Olsson, Ann
Kendzia, Benjamin
Vincent, Raymond
Savary, Barbara
LavouCrossed Sign, Jcrossed D Signr??me
Cavallo, Domenico
Cattaneo, Andrea

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The use of measurement data in occupational exposure assessment allows more quantitative analyses of possible exposure-response relations. We describe a quantitative exposure assessment approach for five lung carcinogens (i.e. asbestos, chromium-VI, nickel, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (by its proxy benzo(a)pyrene (BaP)) and respirable crystalline silica). A quantitative job-exposure matrix (JEM) was developed based on statistical modeling of large quantities of personal measurements. METHODS Empirical linear models were developed using personal occupational exposure measurements (n = 102306) from Europe and Canada, as well as auxiliary information like job (industry), year of sampling, region, an a priori exposure rating of each job (none, low, and high exposed), sampling and analytical methods, and sampling duration. The model outcomes were used to create a JEM with a quantitative estimate of the level of exposure by job, year, and region. RESULTS Decreasing time trends were observed for all agents between the 1970s and 2009, ranging from -1.2% per year for personal BaP and nickel exposures to -10.7% for asbestos (in the time period before an asbestos ban was implemented). Regional differences in exposure concentrations (adjusted for measured jobs, years of measurement, and sampling method and duration) varied by agent, ranging from a factor 3.3 for chromium-VI up to a factor 10.5 for asbestos. CONCLUSION We estimated time-, job-, and region-specific exposure levels for four (asbestos, chromium-VI, nickel, and RCS) out of five considered lung carcinogens. Through statistical modeling of large amounts of personal occupational exposure measurement data we were able to derive a quantitative JEM to be used in community-based studies.

Keywords

asbestos exposure, chromium, exposure assessment, exposure assessmentmixed models, nickel, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, respirable crystalline silica, retrospective exposure assessment, Taverne

Citation

Peters, S, Vermeulen, R, Portengen, L, Olsson, A, Kendzia, B, Vincent, R, Savary, B, LavouCrossed Sign, J D S, Cavallo, D, Cattaneo, A, Mirabelli, D, Plato, N, Fevotte, J, Pesch, B, Br??ning, T, Straif, K & Kromhout, H 2016, 'SYN-JEM : A Quantitative Job-Exposure Matrix for Five Lung Carcinogens', Annals of Occupational Hygiene, vol. 60, no. 7, pp. 795-811. https://doi.org/10.1093/annhyg/mew034