There
is substantial public concern about the health risks of proximity
to petrochemical industries. In the Haifa Bay Area (HBA), which contains
Israel’s densest industrial area, these concerns have been
strengthened by elevated cancer mortality rates since the late 1960s.
We studied the association between adolescent exposure to industrial
air pollution in the HBA and adult-onset cancer. This is a historical
cohort study. The study population comprised 2,187,317 subjects, using
the Israeli medical corps data linked to the Israel National Cancer
Registry with follow-up of up to 45 years. Exposure assessments were
estimated by a spatial kriging interpolation model of SO2, serving as a marker for the dispersion of air pollution emitted
from the complex during the study period. We found increased crude
(HR = 1.23, 95%CI= 1.17 to 1.29) and adjusted (HR = 1.16, 95%CI =
1.10 to 1.21) risk of cancer with increased exposure to air pollution
in HBA. The associations remained robust in analyses stratified by
decade and socio-economic status. We found evidence of monotonically
increased risk in five of 13 cancer categories (leukemia, melanoma,
female breast, central nervous system, and thyroid tumors). Our findings
strengthen the hypothesis that this exposure posed a carcinogenic
risk during the study period.