Cumulative Occupational Exposures and Lung Function Decline in Two Large General Population Cohorts

Publication date

2021-02

Authors

Lytras, Theodore
Beckmeyer-Borowko, Anna
Kogevinas, Manolis
Kromhout, HansORCID 0000-0002-4233-1890ISNI 0000000033136431
Carsin, Anne-Elie
Antó, Josep Maria
Bentouhami, Hayat
Weyler, Joost
Heinrich, Joachim
Nowak, Dennis

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

RATIONALE: Few longitudinal studies have assessed the relationship between occupational exposures and lung function decline in the general population, with sufficiently long follow-up. OBJECTIVES: Our objective was to examine this potential association in two large cohorts (ECRHS and SAPALDIA). METHODS: General population samples aged 18 to 62 were randomly selected in 1991-1993, and followed up approximately 10 and 20 years later. Spirometry (without bronchodilation) was performed at each visit. Coded complete job histories during follow-up visits were linked to a Job-Exposure Matrix, generating cumulative exposure estimates for 12 occupational exposures. FEV1 and FVC were jointly modelled in linear mixed-effects models, fitted in a Bayesian framework, taking into account age and smoking. RESULTS: A total of 40,024 lung function measurements from 17,833 study participants were analyzed. We found accelerated declines in FEV1 and the FEV1/FVC ratio for exposure to biological dust, mineral dust and metals (FEV1 -15.1ml, -14.4ml and -18.7ml respectively, and FEV1/FVC -0.52%, -0.43% and -0.36% respectively, per 25 intensity-years of exposure). These declines were comparable in magnitude to those associated with long-term smoking. No effect modification by sex or smoking status was identified. Findings were similar between the ECRHS and SAPALDIA cohorts. CONCLUSIONS: Our results greatly strengthen the evidence base implicating occupation, independent of smoking, as a risk factor for lung function decline. This highlights the need to prevent or control these exposures in the workplace.

Keywords

spirometry, lung function, occupational exposure, occupational disease, longitudinal studies, Taverne

Citation

Lytras, T, Beckmeyer-Borowko, A, Kogevinas, M, Kromhout, H, Carsin, A-E, Antó, J M, Bentouhami, H, Weyler, J, Heinrich, J, Nowak, D, Urrutia, I, Martínez-Moratalla, J, Gullón, J A, Pereira Vega, A, Raherison Semjen, C, Pin, I, Demoly, P, Leynaert, B, Villani, S, Gislason, T, Svanes, Ø, Holm, M, Forsberg, B, Norbäck, D, Mehta, A J, Keidel, D, Vernez, D, Benke, G, Jõgi, R, Torén, K, Sigsgaard, T, Schlünssen, V, Olivieri, M, Blanc, P D, Watkins, J, Bono, R, Squillacioti, G, Buist, A S, Vermeulen, R, Jarvis, D, Probst-Hensch, N & Zock, J-P 2021, 'Cumulative Occupational Exposures and Lung Function Decline in Two Large General Population Cohorts', Annals of the American Thoracic Society, vol. 18, no. 2, pp. 238-246. https://doi.org/10.1513/AnnalsATS.202002-113OC