A case-control study investigating risk factors for childhood brain tumors was conducted in the Ile de France (Paris region). During a 2-year period (1985-1987) 109 newly diagnosed cases were identified and, of these, 75 could be interviewed. In the same region, 113 population controls, frequency-matched for year of birth, were interviewed. Odds ratios adjusted for child's age and sex and for maternal age were estimated for each risk factor present in utero or during childhood by conditional logistic regression. Statistically significant associations were found for the following risk factors: farm residence, cat scratches, home treated with pesticides, passive smoking, family history of cancer, antihistamine intake. Intake of vitamin supplements during childhood was associated with a decrease in risk. This study is part of a multicentric case-control study coordinated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer and its results will be compared for consistency, and pooled with those of other centers using the same protocol.
The roles of farm practices, occupational exposures to organic solvents, and ionizing radiation in the risk of hairy cell leukaemia (HCL) were examined in a French hospital-based multicentre case-control study including 291 cases (229 men and 62 women) and 541 controls (425 men and 116 women). No positive association was observed with occupations involving exposure to organic solvents or with self-declared exposures to solvents, but a significant association with self-reported exposure to petrol or diesel was found for men (OR = 1.5 CI95% [1.0-2.1]). No association with ionizing radiation was detected. Agriculture employment gave an odds ratio of 1.7 (CI95% [1.1-2.4]) for men and 2.7 (CI95% [1.1-6.7]) for women. Among men, the association seems to affect farmers rather than agricultural workers. Self-declared exposure to pesticides or bovine cattle breeding was related to HCL risk in both genders. Finally, a significant negative association with smoking was observed in men, with an inverse exposure-risk relationship odds ratios of 0.6, 0.5 and 0.2, respectively, for cumulative consumptions of < 10, 10-23 and > or = 24 pack-years), contrasting with an odds ratios clearly > 1 in women.
Between 1990 and 1995, 9 French cities provided data on daily air pollution, total mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and respiratory mortality. Personnel in individual cities performed Poisson regressions, controlling for trends in seasons, calendar effects, influenza epidemics, temperature, and humidity, to assess the short-term effects of air pollution. The authors describe results obtained from the quantitative pooling of these local analyses. When no heterogeneity could be detected, a fixed-effect model was used; otherwise, a random-effect model was used. Significant and positive associations were found between total daily deaths in these cities and the 4 air pollution indicators studied: (1) Black Smoke, (2) sulfur dioxide, (3) nitrogen dioxide, and (4) ozone. A 50-microg/m3 increase in Black Smoke (24 hr), sulfur dioxide (24 hr), nitrogen dioxide (24 hr), or ozone (8 hr) was associated with increases in total mortality of 2.9% (95% confidence interval [CI]) = 1.3, 4.4), 3.6% (95% CI = 2.1, 5.2), 3.8% (95% CI = 2.0, 5.5), and 2.7% (95% CI = 1.3, 4.1), respectively. Similar results were obtained for cardiovascular mortality. Except for sulfur dioxide, positive--but not significant--associations were found with respiratory mortality. The internal consistency among the cities studied, as well as consistency with previously published results, favors a causal interpretation of these associations.
Objective This epidemiologic study was undertaken after a cluster of five cases of rare forms of cancer (bone sarcoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma) had been observed among biomedical research workers at the Pasteur Institute in Paris to ascertain whether their disease was connected with exposure during this research. Methods A mortality study included 3765 people who worked at the Pasteur Institute between 1971 and 1986 and were followed until the end of 1987. Within this cohort a nested case-referent study included 23 cases of cancer [non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (6), multiple myeloma (I), leukemia (3), pancreatic cancer (7), bone cancer (3), brain tumor (3)], and four referents per case, matched for gender and year of birth. Results Total mortality from cancer was less than expected, the standardized mortality ratio (SMR) being 72 for the men and 82 for the women. Among the women the proportion of pancreatic cancer cases was larger than expected [SMR 490, 95% confidence interval (95%CI) 158-1144], as was the number of brain cancer cases (SMR 239, 95% CI 48-696). Among the men, mortality from bone cancer was greater than expected (SMR 553,95% CI 62-2006). In the nested case-referent study, more cases than referents had worked in the areas of molecular biology [odds ratio (OR) 7.1, 95% CI 1.5-331 and microbial genetics (OR 6.7, 95% CI 1.3-35). These cases especially included non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and bone cancer. Associated with this finding was the fact that more cases had used certain chemicals, including ethidium bromide, acrylamide, methylnitronitrosoguanidine and ethylmethanesulfonate, and radioactive compounds (essentially 32phosphorus). C O~~C~U S~O~~S As the products used are potent genotoxicants, the present findings suggest that work in biomedical research might well involve an increased risk of certain types of cancer; this conclusion should be balanced by the fact that two of the five index cases were included in the mortality study and four in the nested casereferent study.
Surveillance des effets sur la santé de la pollution atmosphérique en milieu urbain: étude de faisabilité dans 9 villes françaises. Objectifs et principesMonitoring of hea/th effects of urban air pollution .
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