DESCRIPTION: Diesel exhaust particles are highly respirable with mutagenic and
carcinogenic compounds adsorbed on their surface. Based on results from
laboratory studies in rats and limited evidence in humans, the International
Agency for Research on Cancer classified diesel exhaust as a probable human
carcinogen in 1989. However, the interpretation of past epidemiologic studies
has been limited due to lack of direct measures of diesel exposure and
insufficient years of follow-up. We have identified a unique national cohort of
55,750 long-term trucking company workers employed in 1985. We propose to
conduct an extensive exposure assessment and assess the association of exposure
to diesel exhaust with lung cancer mortality through 2000. The US trucking
fleet has included diesel vehicles since the early 1950s. Therefore, there are
trucking company workers with long duration of exposure and at least 20 years
since first exposure. We will use the results from the exposure assessment,
along with external databases of pollution and truck registrations, to develop
a prediction model for diesel exhaust exposure and form categorical groupings
of exposure levels. The model will include factors that are readily available
in company personnel records such as job title and terminal characteristics so
that exposure levels can be linked to the individual employees. We will assess
ever-exposure, cumulative and duration of exposure. We will use the results
from a questionnaire mailed to all current workers to control for potential
confounding by smoking. In this retrospective follow-up, we will have 80
percent power to detect a relative risk of 1.25. This large cohort provides a
unique opportunity to detect (or refute) suggested carcinogenic effects of
diesel exhaust based on animal toxicology and limited epidemiologic studies.
Furthermore, since the range of exposure in these workers includes levels
similar to the general population, the findings will be relevant to
understanding general population risk of lung cancer from diesel emissions and
other fine particulate air pollution.
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