Grant Details
| Grant Number: |
5R01CA080180-03 Interpret this number |
| Primary Investigator: |
Checkoway, Harvey |
| Organization: |
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center |
| Project Title: |
Cancer Risks Among Textile Workers in China |
| Fiscal Year: |
2002 |
Abstract
DESCRIPTION (Adapted from the Applicant's Abstract): The manufacture of cotton,
wool, and synthetic fiber textiles is one of the world's largest industries.
Moreover, some specific exposures within the industry are either known or
suspected carcinogens. In spite of these considerations, existing knowledge of
cancer risks to textile workers is based on fragmentary epidemiologic data. We
are proposing an epidemiologic study in a cohort of roughly 267,000 women
employees in the textile industry in Shanghai, China. The study cohort has been
enumerated previously for a randomized trial of the efficacy of breast self
exam, and is well characterized with respect to demographic, reproductive, and
lifestyle factors, including cigarette smoking and alcohol use. We will focus
on the following exposure/disease associations as primary hypotheses, all of
which have been suggested but remain largely inconclusive in the literature:
cotton and wool dusts and sinonasal cancer; formaldehyde and nasopharyngeal
cancer; cotton dust and lung cancer; textile dyes and urinary bladder cancer;
synthetic fibers and colon cancer. In a more exploratory mode, we will
investigate textile exposures as potential etiologic factors for breast cancer.
The study will consist of two related phases. The first phase will involve
comparisons of site-specific cancer risks between the cohort and rates in the
general population of Shanghai women during 1989-97. Incidence rates will be
compared with city rates for the entire cohort and for the various
manufacturing sectors (cotton, wool, synthetics, silk, dyeing, and finished
apparel). The second, more in-depth analytic phase will be a case-cohort study
nested within the cohort. The case groups will include incident, during
1989-97, cancers of the lung (expected number 1248), sinonasal passage (21),
nasopharynx (100), bladder (81), colon (433), and breast (1196). A common
referent subcohort (N=2496), will be selected as an age-stratified random
sample from the study base of women textile workers. Historical exposure
reconstruction will be performed for cotton, wool, silk, and synthetic fiber
dusts, dyes, and formaldehyde to support dose-response estimation. The proposed
study will be comprised of unquestionably the world's largest, most well
characterized cohort of textile workers, and should therefore generate
important information that is needed for cancer risk reduction strategies for
women in China and elsewhere, including the United States.
Publications
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