Occupational exposures and Parkinson's disease mortality in a prospective Dutch cohort

Publication date

2015-02-23

Authors

Brouwer, M.ISNI 0000000391681640
Koeman, T.ISNI 0000000392280240
van den Brandt, Piet A
Kromhout, HansORCID 0000-0002-4233-1890ISNI 0000000033136431
Schouten, Leo J
Peters, S.M.ISNI 0000000419418108
Anke, HussORCID 0000-0001-9268-1867ISNI 0000000396358527
Vermeulen, RoelORCID 0000-0003-4082-8163ISNI 0000000396780074

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We investigated the association between six occupational exposures (ie, pesticides, solvents, metals, diesel motor emissions (DME), extremely low frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MF) and electric shocks) and Parkinson's disease (PD) mortality in a large population-based prospective cohort study. METHODS: The Netherlands Cohort Study on diet and cancer enrolled 58 279 men and 62 573 women aged 55-69 years in 1986. Participants were followed up for cause-specific mortality over 17.3 years, until December 2003, resulting in 402 male and 207 female PD deaths. Following a case-cohort design, a subcohort of 5 000 participants was randomly sampled from the complete cohort. Information on occupational history and potential confounders was collected at baseline. Job-exposure matrices were applied to assign occupational exposures. Associations with PD mortality were evaluated using Cox regression. RESULTS: Among men, elevated HRs were observed for exposure to pesticides (eg, ever high exposed, HR 1.27, 95% CI 0.86 to 1.88) and ever high exposed to ELF-MF (HR 1.54, 95% CI 1.00 to 2.36). No association with exposure duration or trend in cumulative exposure was observed for any of the occupational exposures. Results among women were unstable due to small numbers of high-exposed women. CONCLUSIONS: Associations with PD mortality were observed for occupational exposure to pesticides and ELF-MF. However, the weight given to these findings is limited by the absence of a monotonic trend with either duration or cumulative exposure. No associations were found between PD mortality and occupational exposure to solvents, metals, DME or electric shocks.

Keywords

Taverne, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Brouwer, M, Koeman, T, van den Brandt, P A, Kromhout, H, Schouten, L J, Peters, S, Huss, A & Vermeulen, R 2015, 'Occupational exposures and Parkinson's disease mortality in a prospective Dutch cohort', Occupational and Environmental Medicine, vol. 72, no. 6, pp. 448-455. https://doi.org/10.1136/oemed-2014-102209