2019
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.32136
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Ambient air pollution and incident bladder cancer risk: Updated analysis of the Spanish Bladder Cancer Study

Abstract: Although outdoor air pollution and particulate matter in outdoor air have been consistently linked with increased lung cancer risk, the evidence for associations at other cancer sites is limited. Bladder cancer shares several risk factors with lung cancer and some positive associations of ambient air pollution and bladder cancer risk have been observed. This study examined associations of ambient air pollution and bladder cancer risk in the large‐scale Spanish Bladder Cancer Study. Estimates of ambient fine pa… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(36 citation statements)
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Dear editor, We thank Kawada 1 for comments on our recent paper. 2 We agree that air pollution exposure assessment is one of the main limitations of our analysis, being based on modeled estimates of recent concentrations assigned to the participant residence at enrollment some 10 years prior. Although addressing limitations of previous work based on surrogate indicators of ambient air pollution, further work with more detailed individual-level estimates of historical exposure prior to cancer occurrence may be useful.
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supporting
confidence: 58%
“…
Dear editor, We thank Kawada 1 for comments on our recent paper. 2 We agree that air pollution exposure assessment is one of the main limitations of our analysis, being based on modeled estimates of recent concentrations assigned to the participant residence at enrollment some 10 years prior. Although addressing limitations of previous work based on surrogate indicators of ambient air pollution, further work with more detailed individual-level estimates of historical exposure prior to cancer occurrence may be useful.
…”
supporting
confidence: 58%
“…Those engaged in occupations such as taxi driver, truck driver, or street vendor are highly exposed to air pollution and have been reported to be at increased risk for bladder cancers [44]. However, there was no association reported between PM2.5 concentrations and bladder cancer incidence in 15 European cohort studies and one Spanish study [45,46]. The relationship between non-cancer mortality and PM has scarce evidence for bladder cancers as patients with bladder cancers had high to no risk for CVD in the previous studies [5,8].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Those engaged in occupations such as taxi driver, truck driver, or street vendor are highly exposed to air pollution and have been reported to be at increased risk for bladder cancers [44]. However, there was no association reported between PM2.5 concentrations and bladder cancer incidence in 15 European cohort studies and one Spanish study [45,46]. The relationship between non-cancer mortality and PM has scarce evidence for bladder cancers s patients with bladder cancers had high to no risk for CVD in the previous studies [7,42].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%